Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
South Africa
View on Wikipedia
South Africa, officially the Republic of South Africa (RSA), is the southernmost country in Africa.[d] Its nine provinces are bounded to the south by 2,798 kilometres (1,739 miles) of coastline that stretches along the South Atlantic and Indian Ocean;[18][19][20] to the north by the neighbouring countries of Namibia, Botswana, and Zimbabwe; to the east and northeast by Mozambique and Eswatini; and it encloses Lesotho.[21]
Key Information
Covering an area of 1,221,037 square kilometres (471,445 square miles), the country has a population of over 63 million people (the 6th largest in Africa). Pretoria is the administrative capital, while Cape Town, as the seat of Parliament, is the legislative capital, and Bloemfontein is regarded as the judicial capital.[22] The largest, most populous city is Johannesburg, followed by Cape Town and Durban.
Archaeological findings suggest that various hominid species existed in South Africa about 2.5 million years ago, and modern humans inhabited the region over 100,000 years ago. The first known people were the indigenous Khoisan, and Bantu-speaking peoples who migrated, in waves, from west and central Africa to the region 2,000 to 1,000 years ago. In the north, the Kingdom of Mapungubwe formed in the 13th century. In 1652, the Dutch established the first European settlement at Table Bay, Dutch Cape Colony. Its invasion in 1795 and the Battle of Blaauwberg in 1806 led to British occupation. The Mfecane, a period of significant upheaval, led to the formation of various African kingdoms, including the Zulu Kingdom.
The region was further colonised, and the Mineral Revolution saw a shift towards industrialisation and urbanisation. Following the Second Boer War, the Union of South Africa was created in 1910 after the amalgamation of the Cape, Natal, Transvaal, and Orange River colonies, becoming a republic after the 1961 referendum. The multi-racial Cape Qualified Franchise in the Cape was gradually eroded, and the vast majority of Black South Africans were not enfranchised until 1994.
The National Party imposed apartheid in 1948, institutionalising previous racial segregation. After a largely non-violent struggle by the African National Congress and other anti-apartheid activists both inside and outside the country, the repeal of discriminatory laws began in the mid-1980s. Universal elections took place in 1994, following which all racial groups have held political representation in the country's liberal democracy, which comprises a parliamentary republic and nine provinces.
South Africa encompasses a variety of cultures, languages, and religions, and has been called the "rainbow nation", especially in the wake of apartheid, to describe its diversity.[23] Recognised as a middle power in international affairs, South Africa maintains significant regional influence and is a member of BRICS+, the African Union, SADC, SACU, the Commonwealth of Nations, and the G20.[24][25]
A developing, newly industrialised country, it has the largest economy in Africa by nominal GDP,[26][27] is tied with Ethiopia for the most UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Africa,[28] and is a biodiversity hotspot with unique biomes, plant, and animal life. Since the end of apartheid, government accountability and quality of life have substantially improved for non-white citizens.[29] However, crime, violence, poverty, and inequality remain widespread, with about 32% of the population unemployed as of 2024[update],[30][31] while some 56% lived below the poverty line in 2014.[32][33] Having the highest Gini coefficient of 0.67, South Africa is considered one of the most economically unequal countries in the world.[34][35]
Etymology
[edit]The name "South Africa" is derived from the country's geographic location at the southern tip of Africa. Upon formation, the country was named the Union of South Africa in English and Unie van Zuid-Afrika in Dutch, reflecting its origin from the unification of four British colonies. Since 1961, the long formal name in English has been the "Republic of South Africa" and Republiek van Suid-Afrika in Afrikaans. The country has an official name in 12 official languages.[36][37]
Mzansi, derived from the Xhosa noun uMzantsi meaning "south", is a colloquial name for South Africa,[38][39] while some Pan-Africanist political parties prefer the term "Azania".[40]
History
[edit]Prehistoric archaeology
[edit]
South Africa contains some of the oldest archaeological and human-fossil sites in the world.[41][42][43] Archaeologists have recovered extensive fossil remains from a series of caves in Gauteng Province. The area, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, has been branded "the Cradle of Humankind". The sites include Sterkfontein, one of the richest sites for hominin fossils in the world, as well as Swartkrans, Gondolin Cave, Kromdraai, Cooper's Cave and Malapa. Raymond Dart identified the first hominin fossil discovered in Africa, the Taung Child (found near Taung) in 1924. Other hominin remains have come from the sites of Makapansgat in Limpopo Province; Cornelia and Florisbad in Free State Province; Border Cave in KwaZulu-Natal Province; Klasies River Caves in Eastern Cape Province; and Pinnacle Point, Elandsfontein and Die Kelders Cave in Western Cape Province.[44]
These finds suggest that various hominid species existed in South Africa from about three million years ago, starting with Australopithecus africanus,[45] followed by Australopithecus sediba, Homo ergaster, Homo erectus, Homo rhodesiensis, Homo helmei, Homo naledi and modern humans (Homo sapiens). Modern humans have inhabited Southern Africa for at least 170,000 years. Various researchers have located pebble tools within the Vaal River valley.[46][47]
Khoisan People
[edit]Khoisan refers to the indigenous peoples; Sān and Khoekhoen of Southern Africa. The San were mostly hunter-gatherers while the Khoekhoen also practiced pastoralism.[48] Khoisan peoples may be the descendants of an early dispersal of anatomically modern humans to Southern Africa before 150,000 years ago.[49] They were mostly displaced or absorbed by Bantu expansion between 1,500 and 2,000 years ago.[50]
Bantu expansion
[edit]
Bantu settlers expanded from West Africa since approximately 3,000 BCE.[51] Settlements of Bantu-speaking peoples, who were iron-using agriculturists and herdsmen, were present south of the Limpopo River (now the northern border with Botswana and Zimbabwe) by the 4th or 5th century AD. The earliest ironworks in modern-day KwaZulu-Natal Province are believed to date from around 1050 AD.[52] The southernmost group was the Xhosa people, whose language incorporates certain linguistic traits from the earlier Khoisan people. The Xhosa reached the Great Fish River, in today's Eastern Cape Province. As they migrated, these larger Iron Age populations displaced or assimilated earlier peoples. In Mpumalanga Province, several stone circles have been found along with a stone arrangement that has been named Adam's Calendar, and the ruins are thought to be created by the Bakone, a Northern Sotho people.[53][54]
Mapungubwe
[edit]Around 1220, in the Limpopo-Shashe Basin, the elite of K2 moved to settle the flat-topped summit of Mapungubwe Hill, with the population settling below. Rainmaking was crucial to the development of sacral kingship. By 1250, the capital had a population of 5000 and the state covered 30,000 km2 (11,500 square miles), growing wealthy through the Indian Ocean trade. The events around Mapungubwe's collapse circa 1300 are unknown, however trade routes shifted north from the Limpopo to the Zambezi, precipitating the rise of Great Zimbabwe. The hill was abandoned and Mapungubwe's population scattered.[55]
Portuguese exploration
[edit]
In 1487, the Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias led the first European voyage to land in southern Africa.[56] On 4 December, he landed at Walfisch Bay (now known as Walvis Bay in present-day Namibia). This was south of the furthest point reached in 1485 by his predecessor, the Portuguese navigator Diogo Cão (Cape Cross, north of the bay). Dias continued down the western coast of southern Africa. After 8 January 1488, prevented by storms from proceeding along the coast, he sailed out of sight of land and passed the southernmost point of Africa without seeing it. He reached as far up the eastern coast of Africa as, what he called, Rio do Infante, probably the present-day Groot River, in May 1488. On his return, he saw the cape, which he named Cabo das Tormentas ('Cape of Storms'). King John II renamed the point Cabo da Boa Esperança, or Cape of Good Hope, as it led to the riches of the East Indies.[57] Dias' feat of navigation was immortalised in Luís de Camões' 1572 epic poem, Os Lusíadas.
Dutch colonisation
[edit]
In 1595, the Dutch made their first contact with the coast of Southern Africa. With Portugal's maritime power declining in the early 17th century, English and Dutch merchants competed to dislodge Portugal's lucrative monopoly on the spice trade.[58] British East India Company representatives sporadically called at the cape in search of provisions from as early as 1601 but later came to favour Ascension Island and Saint Helena as ports of refuge.[59] Dutch interest was aroused after 1647, when two employees of the Dutch East India Company were shipwrecked at the cape for several months. The sailors were able to survive by obtaining fresh water and meat from the natives.[59] They also sowed vegetables in the fertile soil.[60] Upon their return to Holland, they reported favourably on the cape's potential as a "warehouse and garden" for provisions to stock passing ships for long voyages.[59]
In 1652, a century and a half after the discovery of the cape sea route, Jan van Riebeeck established a victualling station at the Cape of Good Hope, at what would become Cape Town, on behalf of the Dutch East India Company.[61][62] In time, the cape became home to a large population of vrijlieden, also known as vrijburgers (lit. 'free citizens'), former company employees who stayed in Dutch overseas territories after serving their contracts.[62] Dutch traders also brought thousands of enslaved people to the fledgling colony from present-day Indonesia, Madagascar, and eastern Africa.[63] Some of the earliest mixed race communities in the country were formed between vrijburgers, enslaved people, and indigenous peoples.[64] This led to the development of a new ethnic group, the Cape Coloureds, most of whom adopted the Dutch language and Christian faith.[64]
Conflicts over resources between South Africa's indigenous Khoisan people and Dutch settlers began in the 17th century and continued for centuries.[65]
Dutch colonists' eastward expansion caused wars with the southwesterly migrating Xhosa nation, known as the Xhosa Wars, as both sides competed for the pastureland near the Great Fish River, which the colonists desired for grazing cattle.[66] Vrijburgers who became independent farmers on the frontier were known as Boers, with some adopting semi-nomadic lifestyles being denoted as trekboers.[66] The Boers formed loose militias, which they termed commandos, and forged alliances with Khoisan peoples to repel Xhosa raids.[66] Both sides launched bloody but inconclusive offensives, and sporadic violence, often accompanied by livestock theft, remained common for several decades.[66]
British colonisation, the Mfecane, and the Great Trek
[edit]
Great Britain occupied Cape Town between 1795 and 1803 to prevent it from falling under the control of the French First Republic, which had invaded the Low Countries.[66] After briefly returning to Dutch rule under the Batavian Republic in 1803, the cape was occupied again by the British in 1806.[67] Following the end of the Napoleonic Wars, it was formally ceded to Great Britain and became an integral part of the British Empire.[68] British emigration to South Africa began around 1818, subsequently culminating in the arrival of the 1820 Settlers.[68] The purpose of inducing new colonists to settle was primarily to increase the size of the European workforce and to bolster frontier regions against Xhosa incursions.[68]
In the early 1800s, the Mfecane (lit. 'crushing') saw a heightened period of conflict, migration, and state formation among native groups, caused by the complex interplay of international trade, environmental instability, and European colonisation.[69] Chiefdoms grew wealthier and competed over trade routes and grazing land, leading to the formation of the Ndwandwe and Mthethwa Paramountcies in the east.[70] Ndwandwe defeated Mthethwa which split into different groups, one of which was led by Shaka of the amaZulu.[71] The 1810s saw the fourth and fifth Xhosa Wars as British colonisation expanded.[72] Ndwandwe splintered amid costly raids and Shaka's Zulu Kingdom rose to fill the power vacuum.[71] The Gaza kingdom formed. The Zulu totally defeated the Ndwandwe, however were repelled by Gaza.[73][74]

During the early 19th century, many Dutch settlers departed from the Cape Colony, where they had been subjected to British control, in a series of migrant groups who came to be known as Voortrekkers, meaning "pathfinders" or "pioneers". They migrated to the future Natal, Free State, and Transvaal regions. The Boers founded the Boer republics: the South African Republic, the Natalia Republic, and the Orange Free State.[75] In the interior, the Cape Colony expanded at the expense of the Batswana and Griqua, and Boer expansion caused great instability in the Middle Orange River region.[76] The Matabele kingdom came to dominate the eastern interior, and raided the Venda kingdom.[77] The discovery of diamonds in 1867 and gold in 1884 in the interior started the Mineral Revolution and increased economic growth and immigration. This intensified British subjugation of the indigenous people. The struggle to control these important economic resources was a factor in relations between Europeans and the indigenous population and also between the Boers and the British.[78]
On 16 May 1876, President Thomas François Burgers of the South African Republic declared war against the Pedi people. King Sekhukhune managed to defeat the army on 1 August 1876. Another attack by the Lydenburg Volunteer Corps was also repulsed. On 16 February 1877, the two parties signed a peace treaty at Botshabelo.[79] The Boers' inability to subdue the Pedi led to the departure of Burgers in favour of Paul Kruger and the British annexation of the South African Republic. In 1878 and 1879 three British attacks were successfully repelled until Garnet Wolseley defeated Sekhukhune in November 1879 with an army of 2,000 British soldiers, Boers and 10,000 Swazis.
The Anglo-Zulu War was fought in 1879 between the British and the Zulu Kingdom. Following Lord Carnarvon's successful introduction of federation in Canada, it was thought that similar political effort, coupled with military campaigns, might succeed with the African kingdoms, tribal areas and Boer republics in South Africa. In 1874, Henry Bartle Frere was sent to South Africa as the British High Commissioner to bring such plans into being. Among the obstacles were the presence of the independent states of the Boers, and the Zululand army. The Zulu nation defeated the British at the Battle of Isandlwana. Eventually Zululand lost the war, resulting in the termination of the Zulu nation's independence.[80]
Boer Wars
[edit]
The Boer republics successfully resisted British encroachments during the First Boer War (1880–1881) using guerrilla warfare tactics, which were well-suited to local conditions. The British returned with greater numbers, more experience, and new strategy in the Second Boer War (1899–1902) and, although suffering heavy casualties due to Boer attrition warfare, they were ultimately successful due in part to scorched earth tactics and concentration camps, in which 27,000 Boer civilians died due to a combination of disease and neglect.[81]
South Africa's urban population grew rapidly from the end of the 19th century onward. After the devastation of the wars, Boer farmers fled into Transvaal and Orange Free State cities and constituted a white urban poor class.[82]
Independence
[edit]Anti-British policies among white South Africans focused on independence. During the Dutch and British colonial years, racial segregation was mostly informal, though some legislation was enacted to control the settlement and movement of indigenous people, including the Native Location Act of 1879 and the system of pass laws.[83][84][85][86][87]
Eight years after the end of the Second Boer War and after four years of negotiation, the South Africa Act 1909 granted nominal independence while creating the Union of South Africa on 31 May 1910. The union was a dominion that included the former territories of the Cape, Transvaal and Natal colonies, as well as the Orange Free State republic.[88] The Natives' Land Act of 1913 severely restricted the ownership of land by blacks; at that stage they controlled only 7% of the country. The amount of land reserved for indigenous peoples was later marginally increased.[89]
In 1931, the union became fully sovereign from the United Kingdom with the passage of the Statute of Westminster, which abolished the last powers of the Parliament of the United Kingdom to legislate in the country. Only three other African countries—Liberia, Ethiopia, and Egypt—had been independent prior to that point. In 1934, the South African Party and National Party merged to form the United Party, seeking reconciliation between Afrikaners and English-speaking whites. In 1939, the party split over the entry of the union into World War II, as an ally of the United Kingdom, a move which National Party followers opposed.[90]
Apartheid era
[edit]
In 1948, the National Party was elected to power. It strengthened the racial segregation begun under Dutch and British colonial rule. Taking Canada's Indian Act as a framework,[91] the nationalist government classified all peoples into three races (Whites, Blacks, Indians and Coloured people (people of mixed race)) and developed rights and limitations for each. The white minority (less than 20%)[92] controlled the vastly larger black majority. The legally institutionalised segregation became known as apartheid. While whites enjoyed the highest standard of living in all of Africa, comparable to First World Western nations, the black majority remained disadvantaged by almost every standard, including income, education, housing, and life expectancy.[93] The Freedom Charter, adopted in 1955 by the Congress Alliance, demanded a non-racial society and an end to discrimination.
On 31 May 1961, the country became a republic following a referendum (only open to white voters) which narrowly passed;[94] the British-dominated Natal province largely voted against the proposal. Elizabeth II lost the title Queen of South Africa, and the last Governor-General, Charles Robberts Swart, became state president. As a concession to the Westminster system, the appointment of the president remained by parliament and was virtually powerless until P. W. Botha's Constitution Act of 1983, which eliminated the office of prime minister and instated a unique "strong presidency" responsible to parliament. Pressured by other Commonwealth of Nations countries, South Africa withdrew from the organisation in 1961. It would rejoin it in 1994, after the end of apartheid.
Despite opposition to apartheid both within and outside the country, the government legislated for a continuation of apartheid. The security forces cracked down on internal dissent, and violence became widespread, with anti-apartheid organisations such as the African National Congress (ANC), the Azanian People's Organisation, and the Pan-Africanist Congress carrying out guerrilla warfare[95] and urban sabotage.[96] The three rival resistance movements also engaged in occasional inter-factional clashes as they jockeyed for domestic influence.[97] Apartheid became increasingly controversial, and several countries began to boycott business with the South African government because of its racial policies. The boycotts and restrictions were later extended to international sanctions and the divestment of holdings by foreign investors.[98][99]
Post-apartheid
[edit]
The Mahlabatini Declaration of Faith, signed by Mangosuthu Buthelezi and Harry Schwarz in 1974, enshrined the principles of peaceful transition of power and equality for all, the first of such agreements by black and white political leaders in South Africa. Ultimately, F.W. de Klerk opened bilateral discussions with Nelson Mandela in 1993 for a transition of policies and government.
In 1990, the National Party government took the first step towards dismantling discrimination when it lifted the ban on the ANC and other political organisations. It released Nelson Mandela from prison after 27 years of serving a sentence for sabotage. A negotiation process followed. With approval from the white electorate in a 1992 referendum, the government continued negotiations to end apartheid. South Africa held its first universal elections in 1994, which the ANC won by an overwhelming majority. It has been in power ever since. The country rejoined the Commonwealth of Nations and became a member of the Southern African Development Community.[100]
In post-apartheid ANC-governed South Africa, unemployment skyrocketed to over 30% and income inequality increased.[101][102] While many black people have risen to middle or upper classes, the overall unemployment rate of black people worsened between 1994 and 2003 by official metrics but declined significantly using expanded definitions.[103] Poverty among white South Africans, which was previously rare, increased.[104] The government struggled to achieve the monetary and fiscal discipline to ensure both redistribution of wealth and economic growth. The United Nations Human Development Index rose steadily until the mid-1990s,[105] then fell from 1995 to 2005 before recovering its 1995 peak in 2013.[106] The fall is in large part attributable to the South African HIV/AIDS pandemic which saw South African life expectancy fall from a high point of 62 years in 1992 to a low of 53 in 2005,[107] and the failure of the government to take steps to address the pandemic in its early years.[108]


In May 2008, riots left over 60 people dead.[109] The Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions estimated that over 100,000 people were driven from their homes.[110] The targets were mainly legal and illegal migrants, and refugees seeking asylum, but a third of the victims were South African citizens.[109] In a 2006 survey, the South African Migration Project concluded that South Africans are more opposed to immigration than any other national group.[111] The UN High Commissioner for Refugees in 2008 reported that over 200,000 refugees applied for asylum in South Africa, almost four times as many as the year before.[112] These people were mainly from Zimbabwe, though many also come from Burundi, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Eritrea, Ethiopia and Somalia.[112] Competition over jobs, business opportunities, public services and housing has led to tension between refugees and host communities.[112] While xenophobia in South Africa is still a problem, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in 2011 reported that recent violence had not been as widespread as initially feared.[112] Nevertheless, as South Africa continues to grapple with racial issues, one of the proposed solutions has been to pass legislation, such as the pending Hate Crimes and Hate Speech Bill, to uphold South Africa's ban on racism and commitment to equality.[113][114]
On 14 February 2018, Jacob Zuma resigned the presidency. On 15 February, ANC president Cyril Ramaphosa became President of South Africa. On 16 March 2018, just over a month after President Jacob Zuma resigned from the presidency, National Director of Public Prosecutions Shaun Abrahams announced that Zuma would again face prosecution on 16 criminal charges – 12 charges of fraud, two of corruption, and one each of racketeering and money laundering, just as in the 2006 indictment. A warrant was issued for his arrest in February 2020 after he failed to appear in court. In 2021, he was found guilty of contempt of court and sentenced to 15 months' imprisonment. In response, supporters of Zuma engaged in protests which led to riots leaving 354 people dead.[115]
South Africa went through a period of political and economic crisis since 2020, with some international institutions, businesses and political figures stating that the country is heading towards failed state status. Due to high unemployment, low business investment, de-industrialisation, political corruption, and state capture.[116][117][118][119][120] The country has been undergoing an energy crisis since 2007, resulting in routine rolling electricity blackouts due to loadshedding.[121] According to the International Monetary Fund, South Africa is suffering from "massive corruption" and state capture.[122] One of the main causes of instability in South Africa is land distribution, black South Africans own 4% of the land despite making up 80% of the population, while white South Africans control 75% of privately owned land. This is a remnant of the apartheid Bantustan system where black Africans were forced into reservations.[123][124][125] Since 1998, the South African government has settled 80,000 land claims from people who had been evicted from land by the previous government. In 90% of the land claim cases, people chose money instead of land.[126]
The Zondo Commission, established in 2018 in order to investigate allegations of corruption and state capture released its findings in 2022, found corruption at every level of government, including Transnet, Eskom, and Denel, as well as law enforcement. It documented evidence of systemic corruption, fraud, racketeering, bribery, money laundering, and state capture. It investigated the African National Congress party and Jacob Zuma, whom it concluded were complicit in state capture through their direct assistance to the Gupta family.[127][128]
South Africa has maintained a position of neutrality in regards to the Russia invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and the ongoing war. On 29 December 2023, South Africa formally submitted its case to the International Court of Justice regarding Israel's conduct in the Gaza Strip as part of the Gaza war, alleging that Israel had committed and was committing genocide against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.[129][130]
Following the 2024 general elections, the African National Congress saw its share of the national vote fall below 50% for the first time since the end of Apartheid, though it remained the single largest party in the South African Parliament.[131] President Ramaphosa announced a national unity government, the first since the Cabinet of Nelson Mandela, and entered a deal with the Democratic Alliance, the previous main opposition party, and other minor parties.[132] Ramaphosa was reelected for a second term in office by the National Assembly against the leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters, Julius Malema.[133]
Geography
[edit]
South Africa is in southernmost Africa, with a coastline that stretches more than 2,500 km (1,553 mi) and along two oceans (the South Atlantic and the Indian). At 1,219,912 km2 (471,011 sq mi),[134] South Africa is the 24th-largest country in the world.[135] Excluding the Prince Edward Islands, the country lies between latitudes 22° and 35°S, and longitudes 16° and 33°E. The interior of South Africa consists of a large, in most places almost flat, plateau with an altitude of between 1,000 m (3,300 ft) and 2,100 m (6,900 ft). It is highest in the east and slopes gently downwards towards the west and north, and slightly to the south and south-west.[136] This plateau is surrounded by the Great Escarpment[137] whose eastern, and highest, stretch is known as the Drakensberg.[138] Mafadi in Drakensberg at 3,450 m (11,320 ft) is the highest peak. The KwaZulu-Natal–Lesotho international border is formed by the highest portion of the Great Escarpment which reaches an altitude of over 3,000 m (9,800 ft).[139]
The south and south-western parts of the plateau (at approximately 1,100–1,800 m above sea level) and the adjoining plain below (at approximately 700–800 m above sea level – see map on the right) is known as the Great Karoo, which consists of sparsely populated shrubland. To the north, the Great Karoo fades into the more arid Bushmanland, which eventually becomes the Kalahari Desert in the north-west of the country. The mid-eastern and highest part of the plateau is known as the Highveld. This relatively well-watered area is home to a great proportion of the country's commercial farmlands and contains its largest conurbation (Gauteng). To the north of Highveld, from about the 25° 30' S line of latitude, the plateau slopes downwards into the Bushveld, which ultimately gives way to the Limpopo River lowlands or Lowveld.[137]
The coastal belt, below the Great Escarpment, moving clockwise from the northeast, consists of the Limpopo Lowveld, which merges into the Mpumalanga Lowveld, below the Mpumalanga Drakensberg (the eastern portion of the Great Escarpment).[140] This is hotter, drier and less intensely cultivated than the Highveld above the escarpment.[137] The Kruger National Park, located in the provinces of Limpopo and Mpumalanga in north-eastern South Africa, occupies a large portion of the Lowveld covering 19,633 square kilometres (7,580 sq mi)[141]

The coastal belt below the south and south-western stretches of the Great Escarpment contains several ranges of Cape Fold Mountains which run parallel to the coast, separating the Great Escarpment from the ocean.[142][143] (These parallel ranges of fold mountains are shown on the map, above left. Note the course of the Great Escarpment to the north of these mountain ranges.) The land between the Outeniqua and Langeberg ranges to the south and the Swartberg range to the north is known as the Little Karoo,[137] which consists of semi-desert shrubland similar to that of the Great Karoo, except that its northern strip along the foothills of the Swartberg Mountains has a somewhat higher rainfall and is, therefore, more cultivated than the Great Karoo.
The Little Karoo is famous for its ostrich farming around Oudtshoorn. The lowland area to the north of the Swartberg range up to the Great Escarpment is the lowland part of the Great Karoo, which is climatically and botanically almost indistinguishable from the Karoo above the Great Escarpment. The narrow coastal strip between the Outeniqua and Langeberg ranges and the ocean has a moderately high year-round rainfall, which is known as the Garden Route. It is famous for the most extensive areas of forests in South Africa (a generally forest-poor country).
In the south-west corner of the country, the Cape Peninsula forms the southernmost tip of the coastal strip which borders the Atlantic Ocean and ultimately terminates at the country's border with Namibia at the Orange River. The Cape Peninsula has a Mediterranean climate, making it and its immediate surrounds the only portion of Sub-Saharan Africa which receives most of its rainfall in winter.[144][145]
The coastal belt to the north of the Cape Peninsula is bounded on the west by the Atlantic Ocean and the first row of north–south running Cape Fold Mountains to the east. The Cape Fold Mountains peter out at about the 32° S line of latitude,[143] after which the Great Escarpment bounds the coastal plain. The most southerly portion of this coastal belt is known as the Swartland and Malmesbury Plain, which is an important wheat growing region, relying on winter rains. The region further north is known as Namaqualand,[146] which becomes more arid near the Orange River. The little rain that falls tends to fall in winter,[145] which results in one of the world's most spectacular displays of flowers carpeting huge stretches of veld in spring (August–September).
South Africa also has one offshore possession, the small sub-Antarctic archipelago of the Prince Edward Islands, consisting of Marion Island (290 km2 or 110 sq mi) and Prince Edward Island (45 km2 or 17 sq mi).
Climate
[edit]
South Africa has a generally temperate climate because it is surrounded by the Atlantic and Indian Oceans on three sides, because it is located in the climatically milder Southern Hemisphere, and because its average elevation rises steadily toward the north (toward the equator) and further inland. This varied topography and oceanic influence result in a great variety of climatic zones. The climatic zones range from the extreme desert of the southern Namib in the farthest northwest to the lush subtropical climate in the east along the border with Mozambique and the Indian Ocean. Winters in South Africa occur between June and August. The extreme southwest has a climate similar to that of the Mediterranean with wet winters and hot, dry summers, hosting the famous fynbos biome of shrubland and thicket. This area produces much of the wine in South Africa and is known for its wind, which blows intermittently almost all year. The severity of this wind made passing around the Cape of Good Hope particularly treacherous for sailors, causing many shipwrecks. Further east on the south coast, rainfall is distributed more evenly throughout the year, producing a green landscape. The annual rainfall increases south of the Lowveld, especially near the coast, which is subtropical. The Free State is particularly flat because it lies centrally on the high plateau. North of the Vaal River, the Highveld becomes better watered and does not experience subtropical extremes of heat. Johannesburg, in the centre of the Highveld, is at 1,740 m (5,709 ft) above sea level and receives an annual rainfall of 760 mm (29.9 in). Winters in this region are cold, although snow is rare.[147]
The coldest place on mainland South Africa is Buffelsfontein in the Eastern Cape, where a temperature of −20.1 °C (−4.2 °F) was recorded in 2013.[148] The Prince Edward Islands have colder average annual temperatures, but Buffelsfontein has colder extremes. The deep interior of mainland South Africa has the hottest temperatures: a temperature of 51.7 °C (125.06 °F) was recorded in 1948 in the Northern Cape Kalahari near Upington,[149] but this temperature is unofficial and was not recorded with standard equipment; the official highest temperature is 48.8 °C (119.84 °F) at Vioolsdrif in January 1993.[150]
Climate change in South Africa is leading to increased temperatures and rainfall variability. Extreme weather events are becoming more prominent.[151] This is a critical concern for South Africans as climate change will affect the overall status and wellbeing of the country, for example with regards to water resources. Speedy environmental changes are resulting in clear effects on the community and environmental level in different ways and aspects, starting with air quality, to temperature and weather patterns, reaching out to food security and disease burden.[152] According to computer-generated climate modelling produced by the South African National Biodiversity Institute,[153] parts of southern Africa will see an increase in temperature by about 1 °C (1.8 °F) along the coast to more than 4 °C (7.2 °F) in the already hot hinterland such as the Northern Cape in late spring and summertime by 2050. The Cape Floral Region is predicted to be hit very hard by climate change. Drought, increased intensity and frequency of fire, and climbing temperatures are expected to push many rare species towards extinction. South Africa has published two national climate change reports in 2011 and 2016.[154] South Africa contributes considerable carbon dioxide emissions, being the 14th largest emitter of carbon dioxide,[155] primarily from its heavy reliance on coal and oil for energy production.[155] As part of its international commitments, South Africa has pledged to peak emissions between 2020 and 2025.[155]
Biodiversity
[edit]
South Africa signed the Rio Convention on Biological Diversity on 4 June 1994 and became a party to the convention on 2 November 1995.[156] It has subsequently produced a National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan, which was received by the convention on 7 June 2006.[157] The country is ranked sixth out of the world's seventeen megadiverse countries.[158] Ecotourism in South Africa has become more prevalent in recent years, as a possible method of maintaining and improving biodiversity.
Numerous mammals are found in the Bushveld including lions, African leopards, South African cheetahs, southern white rhinos, blue wildebeest, kudus, impalas, hyenas, hippopotamuses and South African giraffes. A significant extent of the Bushveld exists in the north-east including Kruger National Park and the Sabi Sand Game Reserve, as well as in the far north in the Waterberg Biosphere. South Africa houses many endemic species, among them the critically endangered riverine rabbit (Bunolagus monticullaris) in the Karoo.
Up to 1945, more than 4,900 species of fungi (including lichen-forming species) had been recorded.[159] In 2006, the number of fungi in South Africa was estimated at 200,000 species but did not take into account fungi associated with insects.[160] If correct, then the number of South African fungi dwarfs that of its plants. In at least some major South African ecosystems, an exceptionally high percentage of fungi are highly specific in terms of the plants with which they occur.[161] The country's Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan does not mention fungi (including lichen-forming fungi).[157]
With more than 22,000 different vascular plants, or about 9% of all the known species of plants on Earth,[162] South Africa is particularly rich in plant diversity. The most prevalent biome is the grassland, particularly on the Highveld, where the plant cover is dominated by different grasses, low shrubs, and acacia, mainly camel-thorn (Vachellia erioloba). Vegetation is sparse towards the north-west because of low rainfall. There are numerous species of water-storing succulents, like aloes and euphorbias, in the very hot and dry Namaqualand area. And according to the World Wildlife Fund, South Africa is home to around a third of all succulent species.[163] The grass and thorn savanna turns slowly into a bush savanna towards the north-east of the country, with denser growth. There are significant numbers of baobab trees in this area, near the northern end of Kruger National Park.[164]
The fynbos biome, which makes up the majority of the area and plant life in the Cape Floristic Region, is located in a small region of the Western Cape and contains more than 9,000 of those species, or three times more plant species than found in the Amazon rainforest,[165] making it among the richest regions on Earth in terms of plant diversity. Most of the plants are evergreen hard-leaf plants with fine, needle-like leaves, such as the sclerophyllous plants. Another uniquely South African flowering plant group is the genus Protea, with around 130 different species. While South Africa has a great wealth of flowering plants, only 1% of the land is forest, almost exclusively in the humid coastal plain of KwaZulu-Natal, where there are also areas of Southern Africa mangroves in river mouths. Even smaller reserves of forests are out of the reach of fire, known as montane forests. Plantations of imported tree species are predominant, particularly the non-native eucalyptus and pine.
South Africa has lost a large area of natural habitat in the last four decades, primarily because of overpopulation, sprawling development patterns, and deforestation during the 19th century. The country had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 4.94/10, ranking it 112th globally out of 172 countries.[166] South Africa is one of the worst affected countries in the world when it comes to invasion by alien species with many (e.g., black wattle, Port Jackson willow, Hakea, Lantana and Jacaranda) posing a significant threat to the native biodiversity and the already scarce water resources. Also, woody plant encroachment of native plants in grasslands poses a threat to biodiversity and related ecosystem services, affecting over 7 million hectares.[167] The original temperate forest found by the first European settlers was exploited until only small patches remained. Currently, South African hardwood trees like real yellowwood (Podocarpus latifolius), stinkwood (Ocotea bullata), and South African black ironwood (Olea capensis) are under strict government protection. Statistics from the Department of Environmental Affairs show a record 1,215 rhinos were killed in 2014.[168] Since South Africa is home to a third of all succulent species (many endemic to the Karoo), it makes it a hotspot for plant poaching, leading to many species to be threatened with extinction.[163]
Demographics
[edit]
- <1 /km2
- 1–3 /km2
- 3–10 /km2
- 10–30 /km2
- 30–100 /km2
- 100–300 /km2
- 300–1000 /km2
- 1000–3000 /km2
- >3000 /km2
South Africa is a nation of about 62 million (as of 2022) people of diverse origins, cultures, languages, and religions.[169] The last census was held in 2022, with estimates produced on an annual basis. According to the United Nations World Population Prospects, South Africa's total population was 55.3 million in 2015, compared to only 13.6 million in 1950.[170] South Africa is home to an estimated five million illegal immigrants, including some three million Zimbabweans.[171][172][173] A series of anti-immigrant riots occurred beginning in May 2008.[174][175]
Statistics South Africa asks people to describe themselves in the census in terms of five racial population groups.[176] The 2022 census figures for these groups were: Black African at 81%, Coloured at 8.2%, White at 7.3%, Indian or Asian at 2.7%, and Other/Unspecified at 0.5%.[10] The first census in 1911 showed that whites made up 22% of the population; this had declined to 16% by 1980.[177]
South Africa hosts a sizeable refugee and asylum seeker population. According to the World Refugee Survey 2008, published by the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants, this population numbered approximately 144,700 in 2007.[178] Groups of refugees and asylum seekers numbering over 10,000 included people from Zimbabwe (48,400), the DRC (24,800), and Somalia (12,900).[178] These populations mainly lived in Johannesburg, Pretoria, Durban, Cape Town, and Port Elizabeth.[178]
Languages
[edit]
South Africa has 12 official languages:[6] Zulu, Xhosa, Afrikaans, English, Pedi,[179] Tswana, Southern Sotho, Tsonga, Swazi, Venda, and Southern Ndebele (in order of first language speakers), as well as South African Sign Language which was recognised as an official language in 2023.[6] In this regard, it is fourth only to Bolivia, India, and Zimbabwe in number. While all the languages are formally equal, some languages are spoken more than others. According to the 2022 census, the three most spoken first languages are Zulu (24.4%), Xhosa (16.6%), and Afrikaans (10.6%).[10] Although English is recognised as the language of commerce and science, it is only the fifth most common home language, that of only 8.7% of South Africans in 2022; nevertheless, it has become the de facto lingua franca of the nation.[10] Estimates based on the 1991 census suggest just under half of South Africans could speak English.[180] It is the second most commonly spoken language outside of the household, after Zulu.[181]
Other languages are spoken, or were widely used previously, including Fanagalo, Khoe, Lobedu, Nama, Northern Ndebele, and Phuthi.[182] Many of the unofficial languages of the San and Khoekhoe peoples contain regional dialects stretching northwards into Namibia and Botswana, and elsewhere. These people, who are a physically distinct population from the Bantu people who make up most of the Black Africans in South Africa, have their own cultural identity based on their hunter-gatherer societies. They have been marginalised, and the remainder of their languages are in danger of becoming extinct.
White South Africans may also speak European languages, including Italian, Portuguese (also spoken by black Angolans and Mozambicans), Dutch, German, and Greek, while some Indian South Africans and more recent migrants from South Asia speak Indian languages, such as Gujarati, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, and Urdu. French is spoken by migrants from Francophone Africa.
Religion
[edit]- Christianity (85.3%)
- Traditional faiths (7.80%)
- No religion (3.10%)
- Islam (1.60%)
- Hinduism (1.10%)
- Others (1.10%)
According to the 2022 census, Christians accounted for 85.3% of the population, with a majority of them being members of various Protestant denominations (broadly defined to include syncretic African-initiated churches) and a minority of Catholics and other Christians. Per the 2001 census, the Christian category included Zion Christian (11.1%), Pentecostal (Charismatic) (8.2%), Catholic (7.1%), Methodist (6.8%), Dutch Reformed (6.7%), and Anglican (3.8%). Members of the remaining Christian churches accounted for the rest of the Christian population. Per the 2022 census, Muslims accounted for 1.6% of the population, Hindus 1.1%, traditional African religions 7.8%, 3.1% had no religious affiliation, and 1.1% were "other"."[183][184][185][186]
African-initiated churches formed the largest of the Christian groups. It was believed that many of the persons who claimed no affiliation with any organised religion adhered to a traditional African religion. There are an estimated 200,000 traditional healers, and up to 60% of South Africans consult these healers,[187] generally called sangoma ('diviner') or inyanga ('herbalist'). These healers use a combination of ancestral spiritual beliefs and a belief in the spiritual and medicinal properties of local fauna, flora, and funga commonly known as muti ('medicine'), to facilitate healing in clients. Many peoples have syncretic religious practices combining Christian and indigenous influences.[188]
South African Muslims comprise mainly Coloureds and Indians. They have been joined by black or white South African converts as well as those from other parts of Africa.[189] South African Muslims describe their faith as the fastest-growing religion of conversion in the country, with the number of black Muslims growing sixfold, from 12,000 in 1991 to 74,700 in 2004.[189][190]
There is a substantial Jewish population, descended from European Jews who arrived as a minority amongst other European settlers. This population peaked in the 1970s at 118,000, though only around 75,000 remain today, the rest having emigrated, mostly to Israel.[191] Even so, these numbers make the Jewish community in South Africa the twelfth largest in the world.
Education
[edit]
The adult literacy rate in 2025 was 95%. This was the second-highest in Africa, behind only Seychelles.[192] South Africa has a three-tier system of education starting with primary school, followed by high school, and tertiary education in the form of (academic) universities and universities of technology. Learners have twelve years of formal schooling, from grade 1 to 12. Grade R, or grade 0, is a pre-primary foundation year.[193] Primary schools span the first seven years of schooling.[194] High school education spans a further five years. The National Senior Certificate examination takes place at the end of grade 12 and is necessary for tertiary studies at a South African university.[193] Public universities are divided into three types: traditional universities, which offer theoretically oriented university degrees; universities of technology (formerly called technikons), which offer vocationally-oriented diplomas and degrees; and comprehensive universities, which offer both types of qualification. There are 23 public universities in South Africa: 11 traditional universities, 6 universities of technology, and 6 comprehensive universities. There are also a large amount of FET (Further Education and Training) and TVET (Technical and Vocational Education and Training) colleges in South Africa.[195][196][197]
Under apartheid, schools for black people were subject to discrimination through inadequate funding and a separate syllabus called Bantu Education which only taught skills sufficient to work as labourers.[198]
In 2004, South Africa started reforming its tertiary education system, merging and incorporating small universities into larger institutions, and renaming all tertiary education institutions "university". By 2015, 1.4 million students in higher education have been aided by a financial aid scheme which was promulgated in 1999.[199]
Health
[edit]
According to the South African Institute of Race Relations, the life expectancy in 2009 was 71 years for a white South African and 48 years for a black South African.[200] The healthcare spending in the country is about 9% of GDP.[201] About 84% of the population depends on the public healthcare system,[201] which is beset with chronic human resource shortages and limited resources.[202] About 20% of the population use private healthcare.[203] Only 16% of the population are covered by medical aid schemes;[204] the rest pay for private care out-of-pocket or through in-hospital-only plans.[203] The three dominant hospital groups, Mediclinic, Life Healthcare and Netcare, together control 75% of the private hospital market.[203]
HIV/AIDS
[edit]
According to the 2015 UNAIDS medical report, South Africa has an estimated seven million people who are living with HIV – more than any other country in the world.[205] In 2018, HIV prevalence—the percentage of people living with HIV—among adults (15–49 years) was 20.4%, and in the same year 71,000 people died from an AIDS-related illness.[206]
A 2008 study revealed that HIV/AIDS infection is distinctly divided along racial lines: 13.6% of blacks are HIV-positive, whereas only 0.3% of whites have the virus.[207] Most deaths are experienced by economically active individuals, resulting in many AIDS orphans who, in many cases, depend on the state for care and financial support.[208] It is estimated that there are 1,200,000 orphans in South Africa.[208]
The link between HIV, a virus spread primarily by sexual contact, and AIDS was long denied by President Thabo Mbeki and his health minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, who insisted that the many deaths in the country are caused by malnutrition, and hence poverty, and not HIV.[209] In 2007, in response to international pressure, the government made efforts to fight AIDS.[210] After the 2009 general elections, President Jacob Zuma appointed Aaron Motsoaledi as the health minister and committed his government to increasing funding for and widening the scope of HIV treatment,[211] and by 2015, South Africa had made significant progress, with the widespread availability of antiretroviral drugs resulted in an increase in life expectancy from 52.1 years to 62.5 years.[212]
Urbanisation
[edit]One online database[213] lists South Africa having more than 12,600 cities and towns. The following are the largest cities and towns in South Africa.
| Rank | Name | Province | Pop. | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Johannesburg | Gauteng | 9,167,045 | ||||||
| 2 | Cape Town | Western Cape | 4,004,793 | ||||||
| 3 | Durban | KwaZulu-Natal | 3,661,911 | ||||||
| 4 | Pretoria | Gauteng | 2,437,000 | ||||||
| 5 | Gqeberha | Eastern Cape | 1,263,051 | ||||||
| 6 | Vereeniging | Gauteng | 957,528 | ||||||
| 7 | Soshanguve | Gauteng | 841,000 | ||||||
| 8 | East London | Eastern Cape | 810,528 | ||||||
| 9 | Bloemfontein | Free State | 759,693 | ||||||
| 10 | Pietermaritzburg | KwaZulu-Natal | 679,766 | ||||||
Government and politics
[edit]South Africa is a parliamentary republic, but unlike most such republics, the president is both head of state and head of government and depends for their tenure on the confidence of Parliament. The executive, legislature, and judiciary are all subject to the supremacy of the Constitution of South Africa, and the superior courts have the power to strike down executive actions and acts of Parliament if they are unconstitutional. The National Assembly, the lower house of Parliament, consists of 400 members and is elected every five years by a system of party-list proportional representation. The National Council of Provinces, the upper house, consists of ninety members, with each of the nine provincial legislatures electing ten members.
After each parliamentary election, the National Assembly elects one of its members as president; hence the president serves a term of office the same as that of the Assembly, normally five years. No president may serve more than two terms in office.[216] The president appoints a deputy president and ministers (each representing a department) who form the cabinet. The National Assembly may remove the president and the cabinet by a motion of no confidence. In the most recent election, held on 29 May 2024, the ANC lost its majority for the first time since the end of Apartheid,[217] winning only 40% of the vote and 159 seats, while the main opposition, the Democratic Alliance (DA), won 22% of the vote and 87 seats. uMkhonto weSizwe, a new party founded by former President and ANC leader Jacob Zuma, won 14.6% of the vote and 58 seats, while the Economic Freedom Fighters, founded by Julius Malema, former president of the ANC Youth League who was later expelled from the ANC, won 9.5% of the vote and 39 seats. After the election, the ANC formed a Government of National Unity with the DA and several smaller parties.[218]
South Africa has no legally defined capital city. The fourth chapter of the constitution states "The seat of Parliament is Cape Town, but an Act of Parliament enacted in accordance with section 76(1) and (5) may determine that the seat of Parliament is elsewhere."[219] The country's three branches of government are split over different cities. Cape Town, as the seat of Parliament, is the legislative capital; Pretoria, as the seat of the president and cabinet, is the administrative capital; and Bloemfontein is the seat of the Supreme Court of Appeal, and has traditionally been regarded as the judicial capital;[22] although the highest court, the Constitutional Court of South Africa has been based in Johannesburg since 1994. Most foreign embassies are located in Pretoria.
Since 2004, South Africa has had many thousands of popular protests,[220] some violent, making it, according to one academic, the "most protest-rich country in the world".[221] There have been numerous incidents of political repression as well as threats of future repression in violation of the constitution, leading some analysts and civil society organisations to conclude that there is or could be a new climate of political repression.[222][223]
In 2022, South Africa was placed sixth out of 48 sub-Saharan African countries on the Ibrahim Index of African Governance. South Africa scored well in the categories of Rule of Law, Transparency, Corruption, Participation and Human Rights, but scored low in Safety and Security.[224] In 2006, South Africa became one of the first jurisdictions in the world to legalise same-sex marriage.[225][226]
The Constitution of South Africa is the supreme rule of law in the country. The primary sources of South African law are Roman-Dutch mercantile law and personal law and English Common law, as imports of Dutch settlements and British colonialism.[227] The first European-based law in South Africa was brought by the Dutch East India Company and is called Roman-Dutch law. It was imported before the codification of European law into the Napoleonic Code and is comparable in many ways to Scots law. This was followed in the 19th century by English law, both common and statutory. After unification in 1910, South Africa had its own parliament which passed laws specific for South Africa, building on those previously passed for the individual member colonies. The judicial system consists of the magistrates' courts, which hear lesser criminal cases and smaller civil cases; the High Court, which has divisions that serve as the courts of general jurisdiction for specific areas; the Supreme Court of Appeal; and the Constitutional Court, which is the highest court.
Foreign relations
[edit]
As the Union of South Africa, the country is a founding member of the United Nations (UN), with Prime Minister Jan Smuts writing the preamble to the UN Charter.[228][229] South Africa is one of the founding members of the African Union (AU) and has the largest economy of all the members. It is a founding member of the AU's New Partnership for Africa's Development. After apartheid ended, South Africa was readmitted to the Commonwealth of Nations. The country is a member of the Group of 77 and chaired the organisation in 2006. South Africa is also a member of the Southern African Development Community, South Atlantic Peace and Cooperation Zone, Southern African Customs Union, Antarctic Treaty System, World Trade Organization, International Monetary Fund, G20, G8+5, and the Port Management Association of Eastern and Southern Africa.
South Africa has played a key role as a mediator in African conflicts over the last decade, such as in Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Comoros, Mozambique and Zimbabwe.
President Jacob Zuma and Chinese President Hu Jintao upgraded bilateral ties between the two countries in 2010 when they signed the Beijing Agreement which elevated South Africa's earlier "strategic partnership" with China to the higher level of "comprehensive strategic partnership" in both economic and political affairs, including the strengthening of exchanges between their respective ruling parties and legislatures.[230][231] In 2011, South Africa joined the Brazil-Russia-India-China (BRICS) grouping of countries, identified by Zuma as the country's largest trading partners and also the largest trading partners with Africa as a whole. Zuma asserted that BRICS member countries would also work with each other through the UN, G20, and the India, Brazil South Africa (IBSA) forum.[232]
Military
[edit]The South African National Defence Force (SANDF) serves as the unified armed forces of South Africa. Established in 1994[233][234] it was formed as a volunteer military through the integration of the former South African Defence Force (SADF) and various liberation movement forces.[233] The SANDF is subdivided into four branches, the South African Army, the South African Air Force, the South African Navy, and the South African Military Health Service. As of 2025, it consists of around 75,000 professional soldiers and operates under the authority of the President of South Africa, who serves as the Commander-in-Chief.[235][236]
In recent years, the SANDF has become a major peacekeeping force in Africa,[237] and has been involved in operations in Lesotho, the DRC,[237] and Mozambique,[237] amongst others. It has also served in multinational UN Peacekeeping forces such as the UN Force Intervention Brigade. As of 2025, South Africa spends approximately R57 billion (around US$3.25 billion), which amounts to roughly 0.8% of GDP, on defence.[238] Proposals have been made to raise this allocation to 1.5% of GDP—around R110 billion (about US$6 billion)—to address capability gaps, modernization needs, and regional security responsibilities.[239][240]
South Africa has the most advanced military-industrial complex in Africa and is among the most advanced military industries in the world.[241] The sector is coordinated by the Armaments Corporation of South Africa (Armscor), the state-owned arms procurement agency. The industry consists of over 20 companies, with the largest being Denel, Paramount Group, and Milkor. South Africa's defence industry produces a wide range of military equipment, including missiles, armoured vehicles, attack helicopters, naval vessels, and combat drones.[242][243] As a result of this domestic capability, it is estimated that around 80% of the SANDF's equipment is sourced from the local defence industry.

South Africa is the only African nation to have successfully developed nuclear weapons. From the 1960s to the early 1990s, the country pursued a weapons of mass destruction programme amid Cold War tensions.[244] Six operational nuclear devices were completed between 1980 and 1990, with a seventh left unfinished before all were voluntarily dismantled in 1991.[244] This made South Africa the first country (followed by Ukraine) to voluntarily renounce and dismantle its nuclear arsenal, joining the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) the same year.[244] South Africa is also alleged to have conducted a nuclear test over the Atlantic in 1979, known as the "Vela incident", although this is officially denied; then-President F.W. de Klerk later asserted that South Africa had "never conducted a clandestine nuclear test".[245][246]
Despite dismantling its arsenal, South Africa's Pelindaba Nuclear Research Centre still stores enriched uranium from the dismantled warheads.[247] This allows the country to maintain the technical capability to redevelop nuclear weapons if it chose to do so. However, the enriched uranium is used primarily for peaceful purposes, including nuclear research and medical isotope production, reflecting South Africa's commitment to the peaceful use of nuclear energy.[248][249] In 2017, South Africa reaffirmed its disarmament stance by signing the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, and ratified it in 2019.[250][251]
Law enforcement and crime
[edit]
Law enforcement in South Africa is primarily the responsibility of the South African Police Service (SAPS), the national police force with over 1,150 police stations and around 150,950 officers.[252] The SAPS handles crime prevention, investigation, and security nationwide. It has an elite tactical unit, the Special Task Force (STF), specialising in counter-terrorism, counter-insurgency, and hostage rescue operations. In the 2023 International SWAT Competition, the STF ranked 9th out of 55 international law enforcement teams, making it the highest-ranked African police unit and one of the world's best.[253] In addition to formal policing, South Africa has the world's largest private security industry,[254] comprising over 10,000 companies and more than 2.5 million registered personnel,[255] exceeding the combined size of both the national police and military.[256] The private security industry plays a crucial role in supplementing public security amid ongoing concerns about crime and safety.[257]

South Africa faces one of the world's highest rates of violent crime and leads Africa in this regard.[258] From April 2017 to March 2018, an average of 57 murders were committed each day, with a murder rate more than five times the global average.[259] Serious crimes such as armed robbery, hijackings, cash-in-transit heists, gang violence, and sexual violence remain critical challenges.[260][261] South Africa has the highest reported rape rate in the world,[262] with tens of thousands of cases annually, though many go unreported.[263] More than 526,000 South Africans were murdered from 1994 to 2019.[264]
Gang violence is a major driver of South Africa's homicide rate, especially in the Cape Flats region of Cape Town, including areas like Manenberg, Hanover Park, and Lavender Hill. Gangs compete violently over territory, drug trafficking routes, extortion, and control of illegal firearms.[265] These conflicts frequently lead to fatal shootings and civilian casualties, with children and bystanders often caught in the crossfire.[266]
Despite efforts to enhance law enforcement and community safety, crime and social tensions persist as major challenges. South Africa's criminal justice system faces ongoing criticism for underreporting, corruption, and inefficiency, fostering public distrust and a culture of impunity. These challenges continue to fuel debates on security, governance, and human rights across the country.[267]
Administrative divisions
[edit]
Each of the nine provinces is governed by a unicameral legislature, which is elected every five years by party-list proportional representation. The legislature elects a premier as head of government, and the premier appoints an Executive Council as a provincial cabinet. The powers of provincial governments are limited to topics listed in the constitution; these topics include such fields as health, education, public housing and transport.
The provinces are in turn divided into 52 districts: 8 metropolitan and 44 district municipalities. The district municipalities are further subdivided into 205 local municipalities. The metropolitan municipalities, which govern the largest urban agglomerations, perform the functions of both district and local municipalities.
| Province | Provincial capital | Largest city | Area (km2)[268] | Population (2022)[169] |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eastern Cape | Bhisho | Gqeberha | 168,966 | 7,230,204 |
| Free State | Bloemfontein | Bloemfontein | 129,825 | 2,964,412 |
| Gauteng | Johannesburg | Johannesburg | 18,178 | 15,099,422 |
| KwaZulu-Natal | Pietermaritzburg | Durban | 94,361 | 12,423,907 |
| Limpopo | Polokwane | Polokwane | 125,754 | 6,572,720 |
| Mpumalanga | Mbombela | Mbombela | 76,495 | 5,143,324 |
| North West | Mahikeng | Klerksdorp | 104,882 | 3,804,548 |
| Northern Cape | Kimberley | Kimberley | 372,889 | 1,355,946 |
| Western Cape | Cape Town | Cape Town | 129,462 | 7,433,019 |
Economy
[edit]
South Africa has a mixed economy and is recognised as the most industrialised, technologically advanced, and diversified on the African continent.[270][271] With a gross domestic product (GDP) exceeding US$400 billion, it is also the continent's largest economy. South Africa also has a relatively high GDP per capita compared to other countries in sub-Saharan Africa, and its purchasing power parity (PPP) of around US$16,000 ranks among the highest on the continent as of 2025. The South African rand (ZAR) serves as the official currency, and is the most traded in Africa as well as one of the few African currencies active on the global foreign exchange market.[272] South Africa is home to the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE), the largest stock exchange in Africa and the 17th-largest in the world by market capitalization.[273] In August 2013, South Africa was ranked as the top African "Country of the Future" by fDi Intelligence based on the country's economic potential, labour environment, cost-effectiveness, infrastructure, business friendliness, and foreign direct investment strategy.[274]
Despite its economic advancements, South Africa faces persistent socioeconomic challenges. The country has one of the highest unemployment and poverty rates in the world, with youth unemployment in particular remaining a concern. It also ranks among the top 10 nations in the world for income inequality, as measured by the Gini coefficient.[275][276][277] Despite these challenges, South Africa remains the only African member of the G20, reflecting its financial importance and integration into the global economy.
South Africa's financial services sector is the most developed in Africa and among the strongest in the Global South, contributing around 20% of GDP and forming the largest and most important component of the country's economy.[278][279] Johannesburg serves as the financial hub of the continent, hosting Africa's largest banks and multinational corporations.[280][281] Institutions such as Standard Bank, First National Bank, Absa, and Nedbank operate across multiple African markets and internationally. The Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) had a market capitalization of approximately US$1.36 trillion in 2023, making it the largest stock exchange in Africa and placing it among the top 20 globally. With Africa's total market capitalization standing at around US$1.60 trillion, the JSE alone accounts for about 90% of the continent's combined value, exceeding the total of all other African exchanges.[282] The sector is overseen by the South African Reserve Bank, the oldest central bank on the continent, which plays a critical role in maintaining monetary stability.[283]

The manufacturing sector accounts for about 13% of GDP and employs over 1.7 million people. Central to this industry is the automotive industry, with companies such as Toyota, Volkswagen, BMW, Ford, Mercedes-Benz, and Nissan maintaining large-scale assembly plants. South Africa produces more than 600,000 vehicles annually, over 60% of which are exported to Europe, Asia, and other African countries,[285] making it the largest motor vehicle producer in Africa and 21st in the world.[286] Other major manufacturing industries include processed food and beverages, chemicals, textiles, steel, mining equipment, and industrial machinery.
The retail and services industries are also well developed. South Africa has the largest number of shopping centres in Africa and the sixth-highest in the world, including large malls such as Sandton City, Canal Walk, and Gateway Theatre of Shopping.[287][288] Retail giants such as Shoprite, Pick n Pay, Woolworths, and Spar dominate the domestic market, while e-commerce platforms such as Takealot and Makro are expanding rapidly. The country is also internationally known for Nando's, its most successful fast-food brand, which operates more than 1,200 restaurants in over 30 countries.[289]
The mining sector has been a major component of the South African economy since the 19th century and continues to play an important role, contributing around 7.5% of GDP and over half of merchandise exports. South Africa was the world's leading gold producer for much of the 20th century, peaking at nearly 1,000 tonnes in 1970, and it still holds the world's third-largest reserves.[290] The country is also the largest global producer of platinum,[291] chrome,[292] manganese,[293] and vanadium,[294] and ranks second in titanium,[295] ilmenite, palladium, rutile, and zirconium;[296] it also ranks among the top 10 producers of palladium, coal, iron ore,[297] and uranium.[298]
The agricultural sector makes up around 2.6% of GDP but plays a significant role in exports and employment.[300] The country is a major producer of maize, sugarcane, citrus fruits, grapes, apples, pears, wool, and livestock products.[301] South Africa is also the seventh-largest wine producer in the world, with the Cape Winelands region being internationally renowned. The agricultural sector provides about 10% of formal employment and supports a wide network of seasonal and informal labourers.[300]
South Africa's main trading partners include China, the United States, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, Brazil, India, and Saudi Arabia. China is the largest single trading partner, particularly for mineral and raw material exports, while Germany and the United States are major destinations for automotive and machinery exports. The United Kingdom is a key market for South African wine and agricultural products. South Africa ranks among the world's top 50 exporters and importers, with mineral resources, vehicles, machinery, agricultural products, and processed foods forming the bulk of its trade portfolio.[302]
Science and technology
[edit]
Several important scientific and technological developments have originated in South Africa. South Africa was ranked 69th in the Global Innovation Index in 2024.[303] The first human-to-human heart transplant was performed by cardiac surgeon Christiaan Barnard at Groote Schuur Hospital in December 1967; Max Theiler developed a vaccine against yellow fever, Allan MacLeod Cormack pioneered X-ray computed tomography (CT scan); and Aaron Klug developed crystallographic electron microscopy techniques. Cormack and Klug received Nobel Prizes for their work. Sydney Brenner won in 2002, for his pioneering work in molecular biology. Mark Shuttleworth founded an early Internet security company Thawte.[304]
South Africa has cultivated a burgeoning astronomy community. It hosts the Southern African Large Telescope, the largest optical telescope in the Southern Hemisphere. South Africa is currently building the Karoo Array Telescope as a pathfinder for the €1.5 billion Square Kilometre Array project.[305]
South Africa has also made significant advances in military technology. The country pioneered modern mine-resistant ambush protected (MRAP) vehicle technology, setting the global standard for countering landmines and improvised explosive devices (IEDs).[306] In aviation, South Africa played a pioneering role in the development of helmet-mounted display systems, integrating flight and targeting data directly into the pilot's field of view.[307] The Denel Rooivalk military attack helicopter was also the first helicopter in the world to successfully perform a 360-degree loop, a feat previously seen as impossible.[306]
Poverty, inequality, and wealth distribution
[edit]
Despite being the most industrialised economy on the African continent, South Africa continues to grapple with deep-rooted poverty and stark economic inequality. Unlike many other developing countries, South Africa has a relatively small informal economy—only about 15% of jobs are in the informal sector, compared to nearly 50% in Brazil and India, and close to 75% in Indonesia. According to the OECD, this limited informal activity is partly due to the country's extensive social welfare system, which provides basic income support to millions of citizens.[308] World Bank data highlights a significant discrepancy between South Africa's GDP per capita and its Human Development Index (HDI) ranking—one of the largest gaps globally, second only to Botswana.[309]
Approximately 55.5% of South Africans (about 30.3 million people) live below the upper-bound poverty line, while 13.8 million (25%) face food poverty. Despite its high GDP per capita compared to other African nations, poverty and inequality remain widespread. As of 2015, the wealthiest 10% held 71% of national wealth, while the poorest 60% held just 7%. With a Gini coefficient of 0.63, South Africa ranks among the most unequal societies in the world. The government has introduced measures like social grants and minimum wage laws to address the issue of inequality, but progress has been slow and uneven.[310][33]
In terms of wealth, South Africa ranks 40th globally, and with a total private wealth estimated at US$651 billion—the highest on the African continent, making South Africans, on average, the wealthiest in Africa. However, much of this wealth remains concentrated among a small percentage of the population, underscoring the gap between economic potential and widespread prosperity.[311]
Tourism
[edit]
South Africa is a major global tourist destination, with the tourism industry accounting for 3.3% of the country's GDP as of May 2025, according to Statistics South Africa (Stats SA).[312]
In 2024, South Africa experienced a growth in tourism numbers, with combined passenger arrivals through its various ports of entry increasing to 8.92 million people.[312]
In 2025, South Africa was rated as the 4th best country in the world for tourism, as well as the best in the Africa and Indian Ocean region, by The Telegraph.[313]
According to the World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC), the tourism industry directly contributed R102 billion to South Africa's GDP in 2012, and supports 10.3% of the country's employment.[314] 1.8 million people were employed in South Africa's tourism sector in early 2025, and this number is expected to grow significantly over the coming few years.[312]
South Africa offers both domestic and international tourists a wide variety of options, among others the picturesque natural landscape and game reserves, diverse cultural heritage and highly regarded wines. Some of the most popular destinations include several national parks, such as the expansive Kruger National Park in the north of the country, the coastlines and beaches of the KwaZulu-Natal and Western Cape provinces, and the major cities of Cape Town, Durban, and Johannesburg.
The top five overseas countries with the largest number of tourists visiting South Africa in 2017 were the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands, and France. Most of the tourists arriving in South Africa from elsewhere in Africa came from Southern African Development Community (SADC) countries. In terms of tourists from SADC countries, Zimbabwe topped the list at 31%, followed by Lesotho, Mozambique, Eswatini, and Botswana. In addition, Nigeria was the country of origin for nearly 30% of tourists arriving in South Africa.[315]Infrastructure
[edit]Transport
[edit]The country has the largest road network on the continent—about 750,000 km in total—making it the 10th-largest in the world.[316] While the South African National Roads Agency (SANRAL) maintains over 22,000 km of national roads, provinces and municipalities are responsible for the rest. With over 12 million registered vehicles and a road density of 16 vehicles per kilometre, urban areas experience high traffic congestion. Major expressways, including the N1, N2, N3, and N4, connect key cities and form part of transcontinental routes like the Cape to Cairo Highway. Despite this, road safety is a major concern due to poor conditions, speeding, and inadequate enforcement.[317]
South Africa also has the largest and most developed railway network in Africa, and the 9th-largest in the world, with a total track length of approximately 36,000 km as of 2025.[318] Freight rail is dominated by Transnet Freight Rail, Africa's largest freight rail company and South Africa's second-largest state-owned enterprise, while commuter services are handled by the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (PRASA).[319][320] PRASA operates extensive Metrorail services in major urban areas, including the Southern Line in Cape Town. The Gautrain, a modern higher-speed rail system that connects Johannesburg and Pretoria. South Africa is also exploring the development of future high-speed bullet trains to enhance national and regional connectivity, with the first line expected to launch in 2030.[321][322]
As of 2025, South Africa has 573 airports, making it the leading country in Africa by number of airports and 13th globally.[323][324] The country is served by four major international hubs: O.R. Tambo International Airport (Johannesburg), Cape Town International Airport, King Shaka International Airport (Durban), and Chief Dawid Stuurman International Airport (Gqeberha). O.R. Tambo is the largest and busiest airport in Africa, handling over 21 million passengers annually.[325] In 2025, Cape Town International Airport was ranked the best airport in the world by the AirHelp Score index.[326][327] South Africa's airline industry operates a diverse fleet of around 195 aircraft across major airline carriers such as South African Airways (SAA), Airlink, FlySafair, CemAir, and LIFT—making it the largest and most developed aviation market on the continent.[328][329]
South Africa has one of Africa's most important maritime sectors, with major commercial ports located in Durban, Cape Town, Gqeberha, Richards Bay, Saldanha Bay, and East London. The Port of Durban is the largest and busiest container port in sub-Saharan Africa, and the fourth-largest in the Southern Hemisphere, handling approximately 4.5 million TEUs in 2019.[330][331] The Port of Richards Bay is among the continent's largest bulk export facilities.[332] The Port of Cape Town is also a major hub for exports, shipping, and cruise tourism, the city also hosts the largest naval facility in Africa.[333] Port operations are managed by the Transnet National Ports Authority, which plays a crucial role in supporting both domestic logistics and international trade.[334]
Energy
[edit]
South Africa has the largest and most advanced energy sector in Africa and is the first and only country on the continent with a nuclear power plant.[335] It is the largest electricity producer in Africa, ranking 21st globally,[336] and is also the world's 7th-largest coal producer, generating over 248 million tonnes annually. Roughly 77% of the country's energy needs are met by coal, and it produces 92% of the coal used across the African continent. As a result of its coal-heavy energy profile, the country is also the world's 14th-largest emitter of greenhouse gases.[337]
Eskom—South Africa's largest state-owned enterprise and Africa's biggest energy company—generates about 90% of the country's electricity from coal, nuclear, and renewables.[338][339] Eskom ranks among the world's top 10 producers by generation capacity and electricity sales,[340] and in 2001 it was even recognised as the world's best electricity company.[340] However, years of mismanagement and corruption have since left it with debts exceeding R392 billion (US$22 billion).[341]
South Africa operates 14 major coal-fired power stations, including some of the largest and most advanced facilities in the world—such as Medupi, Kusile, Kendal, Majuba, and Tutuka—located in the country's eastern provinces, where the abundant coal reserves are found.[342] In addition, the Koeberg Nuclear Power Station near Cape Town—the continent's only nuclear plant—provides about 5% of the national supply. South Africa also hosts over 30 wind farms and numerous solar PV and concentrated solar power (CSP) plants, mostly located in the Northern, Eastern, and Western Cape provinces, as well as six hydroelectric pumped-storage dams across the country.[342] As of 2025, about 94% of South Africans have access to electricity, compared with just 36% in 1994.[343]

Despite this progress, the country faced an energy crisis for more than a decade. Eskom introduced rolling blackouts (load shedding) in 2007 to prevent grid collapse, with outages peaking in 2023 at 289 days of power cuts.[345] The crisis was worsened by sabotage, coal supply fraud, and internal corruption, primarily targeting the coal-fired power stations.[346][347] During 2019–2023, Eskom CEO André de Ruyter attempted to reform the utility but faced fierce internal resistance and assassination threats from criminal elements within the company.[348] Following his resignation in December 2022, multiple coal-fired generating units were sabotaged, pushing load-shedding to critical levels and bringing the electricity grid close to collapse.[349] In response, President Cyril Ramaphosa declared a national state of disaster and deployed the army and police to secure these coal-fired power stations,[350] leading to the arrests of numerous corrupt Eskom officials and a sharp decline in sabotage.[351][352]
By March 2024, these interventions had helped the country achieve a stable electricity supply for the first time in over a decade, with load shedding currently suspended. Government recovery efforts focused on maintenance, tackling corruption, and completing mega infrastructure projects such as Medupi (Project Alpha) and Kusile (Project Bravo)—two of the world's largest coal-fired plants—expected to be fully operational by the end of 2025.[353][354][355] Simultaneously, South Africa expanded renewable energy projects through independent power producers (IPPs) and is planning to grow its nuclear energy capacity through the Nuclear Energy Corporation of South Africa (NECSA).[356][357] In August 2025, South Africa has approved construction of a new 4,000-MW nuclear power plant near Cape Town—twice the size of Koeberg.[358] The project received environmental authorisation after years of appeals,[359] with the new plant set to secure long-term baseload power alongside renewables and coal.
Telecommunications
[edit]
South Africa has the most advanced telecommunications sector in Africa, regulated by the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA). The country serves as a regional hub for connectivity and digital services, with high mobile penetration and expanding internet access.[360]
The mobile network market is dominated by South African-based operators such as Vodacom, MTN, Telkom, Cell C, and Rain. These providers offer a range of services including 2G, 3G, 4G/LTE, and 5G. By 2024, mobile subscriptions exceeded the population, and internet usage reached over 72%. Notably, MTN Group is the largest mobile network operator in Africa and the 10th-largest in the world measured by subscriptions—reportedly reaching around 290 million users in December 2022.[361] MTN was also the first provider in Africa to launch 5G, alongside Vodacom and Rain.[362][363]
Fixed-line services, mainly provided by Telkom, have declined due to mobile alternatives. However, fiber-optic broadband is expanding rapidly in urban and suburban regions through companies like Openserve, Vumatel, Frogfoot, Octotel, and MetroFibre.[364]
South Africa also has access to satellite internet services, particularly in remote or underserved regions. While local providers offer satellite broadband on a limited scale, demand for low-Earth orbit (LEO) internet solutions such as Starlink has been growing. However, Starlink is currently not available in South Africa due to regulatory issues.[365]
The country has a diverse media landscape, including the public broadcaster SABC, private free-to-air channel E.tv, and satellite TV giant MultiChoice, which operates DStv across sub-Saharan Africa. South Africa has partially rolled out digital terrestrial television (DTT), though full migration from analogue has been delayed.[366]
South Africa also hosts key undersea cable connections like WACS, SAT-3, Seacom, and 2Africa, which support international internet traffic.[367]
Water supply and sanitation
[edit]
Two distinctive features of the South African water sector are the policy of free basic water and the existence of water boards, which are bulk water supply agencies that operate pipelines and sell water from reservoirs to municipalities. These features have led to significant problems concerning the financial sustainability of service providers, leading to a lack of attention to maintenance. Following the end of apartheid, the country had made improvements in the levels of access to water as those with access increased from 66% to 79% from 1990 to 2010.[368] Sanitation access increased from 71% to 79% during the same period.[368] However, water supply and sanitation has come under increasing pressure in recent years despite a commitment made by the government to improve service standards and provide investment subsidies to the water industry.[369]
The eastern parts of South Africa suffer from periodic droughts linked to the El Niño weather phenomenon.[370] In early 2018, Cape Town, which has different weather patterns to the rest of the country,[370] faced a water crisis as the city's water supply was predicted to run dry before the end of June. Water-saving measures were in effect that required each citizen to use less than 50 litres (13 US gal) per day.[371] Cape Town rejected an offer from Israel to help it build desalination plants.[372][373][374][375]
Culture
[edit]The South African black majority still has a substantial number of rural inhabitants who lead largely impoverished lives. It is among these people that cultural traditions survive most strongly; as black people have become increasingly urbanised and Westernised, aspects of traditional culture have declined. Members of the middle class, who have historically been predominantly white but whose ranks include growing numbers of black, Coloured and Indian people,[376][377] have lifestyles similar in many respects to that of people found in Western Europe, North America and Australasia.
Arts
[edit]
South African art includes the oldest art objects in the world, which were discovered in a South African cave and dated from roughly 75,000 years ago.[378] The scattered tribes of the Khoisan peoples moving into South Africa from around 10,000 BC had their own fluent art styles seen today in a multitude of cave paintings. They were superseded by the Bantu/Nguni peoples with their own vocabularies of art forms. Forms of art evolved in the mines and townships: a dynamic art using everything from plastic strips to bicycle spokes. The Dutch-influenced folk art of the Afrikaner trekboers and the urban white artists, earnestly following changing European traditions from the 1850s onwards, also contributed to this eclectic mix which continues to evolve to this day.
Popular culture
[edit]The South African media sector is large, and South Africa is one of Africa's major media centres. While the many broadcasters and publications reflect the diversity of the population as a whole, the most commonly used language is English. However, all ten other official languages are represented to some extent.
There is great diversity in South African music. Black musicians have developed unique styles called Kwaito and Amapiano, that is said to have taken over radio, television, and magazines.[379] Of note is Brenda Fassie, who launched to fame with her song "Weekend Special", which was sung in English. More famous traditional musicians include Ladysmith Black Mambazo, while the Soweto String Quartet performs classical music with an African flavour. South Africa has produced world-famous jazz musicians, notably Hugh Masekela, Jonas Gwangwa, Abdullah Ibrahim, Miriam Makeba, Jonathan Butler, Chris McGregor, and Sathima Bea Benjamin. Afrikaans music covers multiple genres, such as the contemporary Steve Hofmeyr, the punk rock band Fokofpolisiekar, and the singer-songwriter Jeremy Loops. South African popular musicians that have found international success include Manfred Mann, Johnny Clegg, rap-rave duo Die Antwoord, Tyla, and rock band Seether. Rappers such as AKA, Nasty C and Cassper Nyovest gained notoriety in other avenues like the BET Awards for best African acts.
Although few South African film productions are known outside South Africa, many foreign films have been produced about South Africa. Arguably, the most high-profile film portraying South Africa in recent years was District 9, as well as Chappie. Other notable exceptions are the film Tsotsi, which won the Academy Award for Foreign Language Film at the 78th Academy Awards in 2006, as well as U-Carmen e-Khayelitsha, which won the Golden Bear at the 2005 Berlin International Film Festival. In 2015, the Oliver Hermanus film The Endless River became the first South African film selected for the Venice Film Festival.
Literature
[edit]South African literature emerged from a unique social and political history. One of the first well-known novels written by a black author in an African language was Solomon Thekiso Plaatje's Mhudi, written in 1930. During the 1950s, Drum magazine became a hotbed of political satire, fiction, and essays, giving a voice to the urban black culture.
Notable white South African authors include anti-apartheid activist Alan Paton, who published the novel Cry, the Beloved Country in 1948. Nadine Gordimer became the first South African to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, in 1991. J.M. Coetzee won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2003. When awarding the prize, the Swedish Academy stated that Coetzee "in innumerable guises portrays the surprising involvement of the outsider."[380]
The plays of Athol Fugard have been regularly premiered in fringe theatres in South Africa, London (Royal Court Theatre) and New York. Olive Schreiner's The Story of an African Farm (1883) was a revelation in Victorian literature: it is heralded by many as introducing feminism into the novel form.
Breyten Breytenbach was jailed for his involvement with the guerrilla movement against apartheid.[381] André Brink was the first Afrikaner writer to be banned by the government after he released the novel A Dry White Season.[382]
Cuisine
[edit]
South African cuisine is diverse and reflects the country's multicultural heritage, incorporating influences from indigenous African, Dutch, British, Indian, and Cape Malay culinary traditions. Meat plays a central role in many dishes, with the braai—a South African variation of the barbecue—serving as a popular social custom across communities. Common braai staples include boerewors (spiced sausage), lamb chops, steak, pap (maize porridge), and chakalaka (spicy relish).
Traditional dishes include bobotie, a curried minced meat dish with an egg-based topping; bunny chow, a hollowed-out loaf of bread filled with curry, originating in Durban; and potjiekos, a slow-cooked stew prepared in a cast-iron pot over open flame. Street foods such as vetkoek, gatsby sandwiches, samoosas, and biltong (air-dried cured meat) are widely consumed. Popular desserts include milk tart and koeksisters.

South Africa is the origin of several successful multinational fast food chains. The most prominent is Nando's, founded in Johannesburg in 1987, which specializes in flame-grilled peri-peri chicken and operates more than 1,200 restaurants in over 30 countries worldwide.[383] Other notable South African fast-food franchises include Wimpy, Steers, Debonairs Pizza, and Chicken Licken, many of which have expanded into other parts of Africa and beyond. International brands have also become deeply embedded in South Africa's fast-food landscape: the country ranks fifth in the world for the number of KFC outlets, with 960 restaurants—behind only China, the United States, Japan, and India.[384]
In the beverage industry, Monster Energy, though marketed as an American brand, was launched by South African-born entrepreneurs Rodney Sacks and Hilton Schlosberg, who immigrated to the United States and played a key role in the drink's global success.[385]
South Africa has also developed into a major wine producer, with some of the world's most renowned vineyards nestled in the scenic valleys of Stellenbosch, Franschhoek, Paarl, and Barrydale. These regions attract both local and international wine lovers, contributing to a flourishing culinary tourism industry that celebrates the country's food and drink as an essential part of the South African experience.[386]
Sports
[edit]
Sport plays a significant role in South African culture, and the country's most popular sports are soccer, rugby union and cricket.[387] Other sports with notable support are swimming, athletics, golf, boxing, mixed martial arts, tennis, ringball, field hockey, surfing and netball.[388]
Soccer is the most popular sport in South Africa.[389][390][391] South Africa hosted the 2010 FIFA World Cup.[392] It hosted the 1996 African Cup of Nations, with the national team Bafana Bafana going on to win the tournament. South Africa's men's U-20 team also won the 2025 U-20 Africa Cup of Nations. In 2022, the women's team also won the Women's Africa Cup of Nations, beating Morocco 2–1 in the final. The women's team went on to reach the last 16 at the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup, beating Italy and tying with Argentina in the group stage.
Famous combat sport personalities include Baby Jake Jacob Matlala, Vuyani Bungu, Welcome Ncita, Dingaan Thobela, Corrie Sanders, Gerrie Coetzee, Brian Mitchell, Garreth McLellan and current UFC Middleweight Champion Dricus du Plessis. Durban surfer Jordy Smith won the 2010 Billabong J-Bay Open making him the highest ranked surfer in the world. South Africa produced Formula One motor racing's 1979 world champion Jody Scheckter. Famous active Grand Prix motorcycle racing personalities include Brad Binder and his younger brother Darryn Binder.

South Africa has won the Rugby World Cup four times, the most wins of any country. South Africa first won the 1995 Rugby World Cup, which it hosted. They went on to win the tournament again in 2007, 2019 and 2023.[393]
Cricket is one of the most played sports in South Africa. It has hosted the 2003 Cricket World Cup, the 2007 World Twenty20 Championship. South Africa's national cricket team, the Proteas, have also won the inaugural edition of the 1998 ICC KnockOut Trophy by defeating West Indies in the final. The 2023 ICC Women's T20 World Cup was hosted in South Africa and the women's team won silver. The men's team won silver at the 2024 ICC T20 World Cup, and won the 2023–2025 ICC World Test Championship, beating Australia in the final. South Africa's national blind cricket team also went on to win the inaugural edition of the Blind Cricket World Cup in 1998.[394]
In 2004, the swimming team of Roland Schoeman, Lyndon Ferns, Darian Townsend and Ryk Neethling won the gold medal at the Olympic Games in Athens, simultaneously breaking the world record in the 4×100 Freestyle Relay. Penny Heyns won Olympic Gold in the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games, and more recently, swimmers Tatjana Smith (née Schoenmaker), Lara van Niekerk, Akani Simbine and Wayde van Niekerk have all broken records and won medals at both the Olympic and Commonwealth Games, with Wayde van Niekerk being the world record holder in 400 metres since 2016. In 2012, Oscar Pistorius became the first double amputee sprinter to compete at the Olympic Games in London. Gary Player is regarded as one of the greatest golfers of all time, having won the Career Grand Slam, one of five to have done so.[395]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Pretoria serves as the executive capital of South Africa, hosting the Union Buildings and the offices of the President and Cabinet.[3]
- ^ Cape Town is the legislative capital, home to the Parliament of South Africa, including the National Assembly and the National Council of Provinces.[3]
- ^ Bloemfontein serves as the judicial capital, hosting the Supreme Court of Appeal, the highest court for non-constitutional matters in South Africa.[3]
- ^ Cape Agulhas is the geographical southernmost point of the African continent, marking the southern extremity of the Republic of South Africa.[16][17]
References
[edit]- ^ Constitution Eighteenth Amendment Act (47665) (in English and Tswana). Vol. 697. Parliament of the Republic of South Africa. 27 July 2023.
- ^ "Principal Agglomerations of the World". City Population. Archived from the original on 25 December 2018. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
- ^ a b c "South Africa's Three Capital Cities". gov.za. Government of South Africa. Retrieved 19 July 2025.
- ^ a b c "South Africa at a glance". South African Government. Archived from the original on 26 May 2020. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
- ^ a b The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa (PDF) (2013 English version ed.). Constitutional Court of South Africa. 2013. ch. 1, s. 6. Archived (PDF) from the original on 23 August 2018. Retrieved 17 April 2020.
- ^ a b c "The NA Approves South African Sign Language as the 12th Official Language". Parliament of South Africa. 3 May 2023. Archived from the original on 22 December 2023.
- ^ Mitchley, Alex. "SA's population swells to 62 million - 2022 census at a glance". News24. Archived from the original on 11 October 2023. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
- ^ a b "Statistical Release - Census 2022" (PDF). statssa.gov.za. Retrieved 22 August 2024.
- ^ "Census 2022 – Statistical Release" (PDF). www.gov.za. Government of South Africa. 10 October 2023. Archived (PDF) from the original on 15 October 2023. Retrieved 15 October 2023.
- ^ a b c d "Census 2022 Statistical Release" (PDF). Statistics South Africa. Archived (PDF) from the original on 15 October 2023. Retrieved 15 October 2023.
- ^ a b c d "World Economic Outlook Database, April 2025 Edition. (South Africa)". www.imf.org. International Monetary Fund. 16 April 2025. Archived from the original on 16 April 2024. Retrieved 28 September 2025.
- ^ . UNDP. 29 April 2025 https://hdr.undp.org/sites/default/files/2025_HDR/HDR25_Statistical_Annex_I-HDI_Table.pdf=live. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2025. Retrieved 28 September 2025.
{{cite web}}: Missing or empty|title=(help) - ^ "Human Development Report 2025" (PDF). United Nations Development Programme. 6 May 2025. Archived (PDF) from the original on 6 May 2025. Retrieved 6 May 2025.
- ^ "Data Source Comparison for en-ZA". www.localeplanet.com. Archived from the original on 16 August 2021. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
- ^ "Data Source Comparison for af-ZA". www.localeplanet.com. Archived from the original on 5 May 2021. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
- ^ "Agulhas National Park". sanparks.org. South African National Parks. Retrieved 19 July 2025.
- ^ "Cape Agulhas". britannica.com. Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved 19 July 2025.
- ^ "South African Maritime Safety Authority". South African Maritime Safety Authority. Archived from the original on 29 December 2008. Retrieved 16 June 2008.
- ^ "Coastline". The World Factbook. CIA. Archived from the original on 16 July 2017. Retrieved 16 June 2008.
- ^ "South Africa Fast Facts". SouthAfrica.info. April 2007. Archived from the original on 19 July 2008. Retrieved 14 June 2008.
- ^ "Lesotho: Year In Review 1996 – Britannica Online Encyclopedia". Encyclopædia Britannica. Archived from the original on 15 June 2013. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
- ^ a b Marais, Lochner; Twala, Chitja (7 May 2020). "Bloemfontein: the rise and fall of South Africa's judicial capital". African Geographical Review. 40 (1). Informa UK Limited: 49–62. doi:10.1080/19376812.2020.1760901. ISSN 1937-6812. S2CID 218929562.
- ^ "Rainbow Nation – dream or reality?". BBC News. 18 July 2008. Archived from the original on 8 September 2013. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
- ^ Cooper, Andrew F; Antkiewicz, Agata; Shaw, Timothy M (10 December 2007). "Lessons from/for BRICSAM about South-North Relations at the Start of the 21st Century: Economic Size Trumps All Else?". International Studies Review. 9 (4): 675, 687. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2486.2007.00730.x. ISSN 1468-2486.
- ^ Lynch, David A. (2010). Trade and Globalization: An Introduction to Regional Trade Agreements. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-7425-6689-7. Archived from the original on 11 October 2013. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
Southern Africa is home to the other of sub-Saharan Africa's regional powers: South Africa. South Africa is more than just a regional power; it is currently the most developed and economically powerful country in Africa, and is able to use that influence in Africa more than during the days of apartheid, when it was ostracised from the rest of the world.
- ^ "South Africa". World Bank. Archived from the original on 1 November 2011. Retrieved 23 July 2021.
- ^ Waugh, David (2000). "Manufacturing industries (chapter 19), World development (chapter 22)". Geography: An Integrated Approach. Nelson Thornes. pp. 563, 576–579, 633, 640. ISBN 978-0-17-444706-1. Archived from the original on 11 October 2013. Retrieved 24 August 2013.
- ^ "World Heritage List". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Retrieved 16 August 2024.
- ^ Lieberman, Evan (2022). Until We Have Won Our Liberty. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-20300-3. Archived from the original on 24 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
- ^ "Unemployment, total (% of labor force) (modeled ILO estimate) – South Africa". World Bank. Archived from the original on 20 September 2022. Retrieved 19 September 2022.
- ^ "Statistics South Africa on official unemployment rate in third quarter of 2024". South African Government. 12 November 2024. Retrieved 10 February 2025.
- ^ "Poverty headcount ratio at national poverty lines (% of population) – South Africa". World Bank. Archived from the original on 31 July 2020. Retrieved 19 September 2022.
- ^ a b ""World Bank": South Africa" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 April 2023. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
- ^ "World Bank Open Data". World Bank Open Data. Archived from the original on 4 April 2024. Retrieved 4 April 2024.
- ^ Francis, David; Webster, Edward (2 November 2019). "Poverty and inequality in South Africa: critical reflections". Development Southern Africa. 36 (6): 788–802. doi:10.1080/0376835X.2019.1666703. ISSN 0376-835X. Archived from the original on 4 April 2024. Retrieved 4 April 2024.
- ^ "The text". www.concourt.org.za. Archived from the original on 25 December 2023. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
- ^ South African Sign Language is also an official language
- ^ Livermon, Xavier (2008). "Sounds in the City". In Nuttall, Sarah; Mbembé, Achille (eds.). Johannesburg: The Elusive Metropolis. Durham: Duke University Press. p. 283. ISBN 978-0-8223-8121-1. Archived from the original on 2 May 2019. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
Mzansi is another black urban vernacular term popular with the youth and standing for South Africa.
- ^ "Mzansi DiToloki". Deaf Federation of South Africa. Archived from the original on 16 January 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2014.
uMzantsi in Xhosa means 'south', Mzansi means this country, South Africa
- ^ Taylor, Darren. "South African Party Says Call Their Country 'Azania'". VOA. Archived from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
- ^ Wymer, John; Singer, R (1982). The Middle Stone Age at Klasies River Mouth in South Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-76103-9.
- ^ Deacon, HJ (2001). "Guide to Klasies River" (PDF). Stellenbosch University. p. 11. Archived (PDF) from the original on 21 February 2011. Retrieved 5 September 2009.
- ^ "Fossil Hominid Sites of South Africa". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Archived from the original on 4 December 2019. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
- ^ Marean, Curtis W. (September 2010). "Pinnacle Point Cave 13B (Western Cape Province, South Africa) in context: The Cape Floral kingdom, shellfish, and modern human origins". Journal of Human Evolution. 59 (3–4): 425–443. Bibcode:2010JHumE..59..425M. doi:10.1016/j.jhevol.2010.07.011. PMID 20934095.
- ^ Broker, Stephen P. "Hominid Evolution". Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute. Archived from the original on 7 April 2008. Retrieved 19 June 2008.
- ^ Langer, William L., ed. (1972). An Encyclopedia of World History (5th ed.). Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-395-13592-1.
- ^
Leakey, Louis Seymour Bazett (1936). "Stone Age cultures of South Africa". Stone age Africa: an outline of prehistory in Africa (reprint ed.). Negro Universities Press. p. 79. ISBN 9780837120225. Retrieved 21 February 2018.
In 1929, during a brief visit to the Transvaal, I myself found a number of pebble tools in some of the terrace gravels of the Vaal River, and similar finds have been recorded by Wayland, who visited South Africa, and by van Riet Lowe and other South African prehistorians.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ Kim, Hie Lim; Ratan, Aakrosh; Perry, George H.; Montenegro, Alvaro; Miller, Webb; Schuster, Stephan C. (4 December 2014). "Khoisan hunter-gatherers have been the largest population throughout most of modern-human demographic history". Nature Communications. 5 (1): 5692. Bibcode:2014NatCo...5.5692K. doi:10.1038/ncomms6692. hdl:11449/130054. PMC 4268704. PMID 25471224.
- ^ Pargeter, Justin; Mackay, Alex; Mitchell, Peter; Shea, John; Stewart, Brian (2016). "Primordialism and the 'Pleistocene San' of southern Africa". Antiquity. 90 (352).
- ^ Barnard, Alan (1992). Hunters and Herders of Southern Africa: A comparative ethnography of the Khoisan peoples. New York, NY; Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
- ^ Grollemund, Rebecca; Branford, Simon; Bostoen, Koen; Meade, Andrew; Venditti, Chris; Pagel, Mark (27 October 2015). "Bantu expansion shows that habitat alters the route and pace of human dispersals". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112 (43): 13296–13301. Bibcode:2015PNAS..11213296G. doi:10.1073/pnas.1503793112. PMC 4629331. PMID 26371302.
- ^ Whitelaw, Gavin; Janse van Rensburg, Sue (August 2020). "Lake Sibaya and the Beginning of the Iron Age in Kwazulu-Natal" (PDF). The Digging Stick. 37 (2). ISSN 1013-7521. Retrieved 26 June 2025.
- ^ Alfred, Luke. "The Bakoni: From prosperity to extinction in a generation". Citypress. Archived from the original on 20 October 2020. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
- ^ "Adam's Calendar in Waterval Boven, Mpumalanga". www.sa-venues.com. Archived from the original on 17 December 2020. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
- ^ Chirikure, Shadreck; Delius, Peter; Esterhuysen, Amanda; Hall, Simon; Lekgoathi, Sekibakiba; Maulaudzi, Maanda; Neluvhalani, Vele; Ntsoane, Otsile; Pearce, David (1 October 2015). Mapungubwe Reconsidered: A Living Legacy: Exploring Beyond the Rise and Decline of the Mapungubwe State. Real African Publishers Pty Ltd. ISBN 978-1-920655-06-8.
- ^ Domville-Fife, C.W. (1900). The encyclopedia of the British Empire the first encyclopedic record of the greatest empire in the history of the world ed. London: Rankin. p. 25.
- ^ Mackenzie, W. Douglas; Stead, Alfred (1899). South Africa: Its History, Heroes, and Wars. Chicago: The Co-Operative Publishing Company.
- ^ Pakeman, SA. Nations of the Modern World: Ceylon (1964 ed.). Frederick A Praeger, Publishers. pp. 18–19.
- ^ a b c Wilmot, Alexander & John Centlivres Chase (February 2010). History of the Colony of the Cape of Good Hope: From Its Discovery to the Year 1819 (2010 ed.). Claremont: David Philip (Pty) Ltd. pp. 1–548. ISBN 978-1-144-83015-9.
- ^ Kaplan, Irving. Area Handbook for the Republic of South Africa (PDF). pp. 46–771. Archived (PDF) from the original on 28 April 2015. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
- ^ "African History Timeline". West Chester University of Pennsylvania. Archived from the original on 7 January 2009. Retrieved 16 June 2008.
- ^ a b Hunt, John (2005). Campbell, Heather-Ann (ed.). Dutch South Africa: Early Settlers at the Cape, 1652–1708. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 13–35. ISBN 978-1-904744-95-5.
- ^ Worden, Nigel (5 August 2010). Slavery in Dutch South Africa (2010 ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 40–43. ISBN 978-0-521-15266-2.
- ^ a b Nelson, Harold. Zimbabwe: A Country Study. pp. 237–317.
- ^ Elphick, R (1993). Khoikhoi and the Founding of White South Africa (1st ed.). Johannesburg: Ravan Press. p. 240.
- ^ a b c d e Stapleton, Timothy (2010). A Military History of South Africa: From the Dutch-Khoi Wars to the End of Apartheid. Santa Barbara: Praeger Security International. pp. 4–6. ISBN 978-0-313-36589-8.
- ^ Keegan, Timothy (1996). Colonial South Africa and the Origins of the Racial Order (1996 ed.). David Philip Publishers (Pty) Ltd. pp. 85–86. ISBN 978-0-8139-1735-1.
- ^ a b c Lloyd, Trevor Owen (1997). The British Empire, 1558–1995. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 201–203. ISBN 978-0-19-873133-7.
- ^ Eldredge, "Sources of Conflict in Southern Africa," 28.
- ^ Wright, "Turbulent Times," 250.
- ^ a b Wright, "Turbulent Times," 225–226.
- ^ Wright, "Turbulent Times," 233.
- ^ Wright, "Turbulent Times," 227.
- ^ Wright, "Turbulent Times," 249.
- ^ Hillier, Alfred Peter; Cana, Frank Richardson (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 20 (11th ed.). pp. 151–160.
- ^ Wright, "Turbulent Times," 215.
- ^ Wright, "Turbulent Times," 235.
- ^ Williams, Garner F (1905). The Diamond Mines of South Africa, Vol II. New York: B. F Buck & Co. pp. Chapter XX. Archived from the original on 31 July 2012. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
- ^ "South African Military History Society – Journal- THE SEKUKUNI WARS". samilitaryhistory.org. Archived from the original on 23 July 2020. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
- ^ Knight, Ian (6 May 2011). Zulu Rising: The Epic Story of Isandlwana and Rorke's Drift. Pan Macmillan. ISBN 9781447202233. Archived from the original on 28 June 2024. Retrieved 26 December 2023.
- ^ "5 of the worst atrocities carried out by the British Empire". The Independent. 19 January 2016. Archived from the original on 27 September 2019. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
- ^ Ogura, Mitsuo (1996). "Urbanization and Apartheid in South Africa: Influx Controls and Their Abolition". The Developing Economies. 34 (4): 402–423. doi:10.1111/j.1746-1049.1996.tb01178.x. ISSN 1746-1049. PMID 12292280.
- ^ Bond, Patrick (1999). Cities of gold, townships of coal: essays on South Africa's new urban crisis. Africa World Press. p. 140. ISBN 978-0-86543-611-4.
- ^ Report of the Select Committee on Location Act (Report). Cape Times Limited. 1906. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
- ^ Godley, Godfrey; Archibald, Welsh; Thomson, William; Hemsworth, H. D. (1920). Report of the Inter-departmental committee on the native pass laws (Report). Cape Times Limited. p. 2.
- ^ Papers relating to legislation affecting natives in the Transvaal (Report). Great Britain Colonial Office; Transvaal (Colony). Governor (1901–1905: Milner). January 1902.
- ^ De Villiers, John Abraham Jacob (1896). The Transvaal. London: Chatto & Windus. pp. 30 (n46). Retrieved 30 July 2009.
- ^ Cana, Frank Richardson (1911). . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 467.
- ^ "Native Land Act". South African Institute of Race Relations. 19 June 1913. Archived from the original on 14 October 2010.
- ^ "National Party (NP) | South African History Online". www.sahistory.org.za. Archived from the original on 8 May 2020. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
- ^ Gloria Galloway, "Chiefs Reflect on Apartheid" Archived 2 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine, The Globe and Mail, 11 December 2013
- ^ Beinart, William (2001). Twentieth-century South Africa. Oxford University Press. p. 202. ISBN 978-0-19-289318-5.
- ^ "apartheid | South Africa, Definition, Facts, Beginning, & End". Britannica. Archived from the original on 7 May 2022. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
- ^ "Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd". South African History Online. Archived from the original on 29 November 2017. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
On 5 October 1960 a referendum was held in which White voters were asked: "Do you support a republic for the Union?" – 52 percent voted 'Yes'.
- ^ Gibson, Nigel; Alexander, Amanda; Mngxitama, Andile (2008). Biko Lives! Contesting the Legacies of Steve Biko. Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 138. ISBN 978-0-230-60649-4.
- ^ Switzer, Les (2000). South Africa's Resistance Press: Alternative Voices in the Last Generation Under Apartheid. Issue 74 of Research in international studies: Africa series. Ohio University Press. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-89680-213-1. Archived from the original on 11 December 2020. Retrieved 19 October 2020.
- ^ Mitchell, Thomas (2008). Native vs Settler: Ethnic Conflict in Israel/Palestine, Northern Ireland and South Africa. Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 194–196. ISBN 978-0-313-31357-8.
- ^ Bridgland, Fred (1990). The War for Africa: Twelve months that transformed a continent. Gibraltar: Ashanti Publishing. p. 32. ISBN 978-1-874800-12-5.
- ^ Landgren, Signe (1989). Embargo Disimplemented: South Africa's Military Industry (1989 ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 6–10. ISBN 978-0-19-829127-5.
- ^ "South Africa". www.sadc.int. Archived from the original on 25 December 2023. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
- ^ Head, Tom (4 April 2018). ""Inequality has increased in South Africa since apartheid" – World Bank". The South African. Archived from the original on 15 August 2024. Retrieved 7 February 2025.
- ^ "South Africa's Unemployment Reaches New Highs". Barron's. Agence France-Presse. 13 August 2024. Retrieved 7 February 2025.
- ^ "Post-Apartheid South Africa: the First Ten Years – Unemployment and the Labor Market" (PDF). IMF. Archived (PDF) from the original on 29 July 2013. Retrieved 16 February 2013.
- ^ "Zuma surprised at level of white poverty". Mail & Guardian. 18 April 2008. Archived from the original on 29 July 2013. Retrieved 30 May 2010.
- ^ "South Africa". Human Development Report. United Nations Development Programme. 2006. Archived from the original on 29 November 2007. Retrieved 28 November 2007.
- ^ "2015 United Nations Human Development Report" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 5 August 2018.
- ^ "South African Life Expectancy at Birth, World Bank". Archived from the original on 6 August 2018. Retrieved 5 August 2018.
- ^ "Ridicule succeeds where leadership failed on AIDS". South African Institute of Race Relations. 10 November 2006.[dead link]
- ^ a b Chance, Kerry (20 June 2008). "Broke-on-Broke Violence". Slate. Archived from the original on 8 September 2011. Retrieved 6 July 2011.
- ^ "COHRE statement on Xenophobic Attacks". 2 June 2008. Archived from the original on 18 January 2012. Retrieved 6 July 2011.
- ^ Southern African Migration Project; Institute for Democracy in South Africa; Queen's University (2008). Jonathan Crush (ed.). The perfect storm: the realities of xenophobia in contemporary South Africa (PDF). Idasa. p. 1. ISBN 978-1-920118-71-6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 July 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ a b c d "UNHCR Global Appeal 2011 – South Africa". UNHCR. United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Archived from the original on 11 May 2013. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
- ^ Harris, Bronwyn (2004). Arranging prejudice: Exploring hate crime in post-apartheid South Africa (PDF) (Report). Cape Town: Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation. Archived (PDF) from the original on 28 May 2024. Retrieved 10 June 2024.
- ^ Traum, Alexander (2014). "Contextualising the hate speech debate: the United States and South Africa". The Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa. 47 (1): 64–88. ISSN 0010-4051. JSTOR 24585817. Archived from the original on 10 June 2024. Retrieved 10 June 2024.
- ^ Campbell, John (15 July 2021). "South Africa Sees the Best of Times and the Worst of Times". Council on Foreign Relations. Archived from the original on 4 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ Ryan, Ciaran. "The deindustrialisation of SA". Moneyweb. Retrieved 6 September 2025.
- ^ "High rate of de-industrialization and the impact on South Africa's economic - resilience - Emeka Umeche". 27 October 2023.
- ^ Levy, Brian; Hirsch, Alan; Naidoo, Vinothan; Nxele, Musa (18 March 2021). "South Africa: When Strong Institutions and Massive Inequalities Collide". Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Archived from the original on 27 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ Poplak, Richard (13 July 2021). "This is what a failed state looks like". Daily Maverick. Archived from the original on 4 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ Head, Tom (6 March 2022). "SA heading towards 'failed state' territory - according to our own Treasury". The South African. Archived from the original on 4 December 2022. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ Pawle, Lucy (9 October 2020). "Ferraris and frustration: Two faces of South Africa's corruption battle". BBC News. Archived from the original on 4 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ Momoniat, Ismail (10 April 2023). "How and Why Did State Capture and Massive Corruption Occur in South Africa ?". International Monetary Fund. Archived from the original on 4 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ "The long shadow of apartheid: How forced relocation to homelands still affects South Africa". VoxDev.
- ^ "Tracing the Paths of Dispossession: The Legacy of Bantustans in Post-Apartheid South Africa". 19 February 2024.
- ^ Tim Cocks (10 February 2025). "The stark divide that South Africa's land act seeks to bridge". reuters.com.
- ^ Westerdale, Jarryd (4 December 2024). "Land expropriation: Almost 90% of claimants choose money instead of property". The Citizen. Retrieved 4 April 2025.
- ^ Maseko, Nomsa (23 June 2022). "South Africa's Zondo commission: Damning report exposes rampant corruption". BBC News. Archived from the original on 4 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ "The Zondo Commission: A bite-sized summary". Public Affairs Research Institute, University of the Witwatersrand. 5 September 2022. Archived from the original on 4 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ Imray, Gerald (5 December 2023). "Hamas officials join Nelson Mandela's family at ceremony marking 10th anniversary of his death". AP News. Archived from the original on 4 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ Ahren, Raphael (19 October 2015). "Jerusalem fumes as South Africa hosts Hamas chiefs". The Times of Israel. Archived from the original on 24 May 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ Chothia, Farouk; Byaruhanga, Catherine (31 May 2024). "South Africa election result: Will ANC share power with MK party or DA?". BBC News. Archived from the original on 1 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ "South Africa's ANC moves closer to forming coalition government". France 24. 14 June 2024. Archived from the original on 15 June 2024. Retrieved 15 June 2024.
- ^ "Ramaphosa is re-elected for second term as South African president, heading broad coalition". Al Jazeera. Archived from the original on 15 June 2024. Retrieved 15 June 2024.
- ^ "Country Comparison". World Factbook. CIA. Archived from the original on 1 May 2011. Retrieved 4 September 2009.
- ^ "Demographic Yearbook – 2015". United Nations Statistics Division. 2016. Archived from the original on 8 July 2018. Retrieved 12 December 2017.
- ^ McCarthy, T. & Rubidge, B. (2005). The story of earth and life. p. 263, 267–268. Struik Publishers, Cape Town.
- ^ a b c d Atlas of Southern Africa. (1984). p. 13. Reader's Digest Association, Cape Town
- ^ Encyclopædia Britannica (1975); Micropaedia Vol. III, p. 655. Helen Hemingway Benton Publishers, Chicago.
- ^ Atlas of Southern Africa. (1984). p. 151. Reader's Digest Association, Cape Town
- ^ Atlas of Southern Africa. (1984). p. 186. Reader's Digest Association, Cape Town
- ^ "Kruger National Park". Africa.com. Archived from the original on 18 December 2014. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
- ^ McCarthy, T. & Rubidge, B. (2005). The story of earth and life. p. 194. Struik Publishers, Cape Town.
- ^ a b Geological map of South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland (1970). Council for Geoscience, Geological Survey of South Africa.
- ^ Encyclopædia Britannica (1975); Micropaedia Vol. VI, p. 750. Helen Hemingway Benton Publishers, Chicago.
- ^ a b Atlas of Southern Africa. (1984). p. 19. Reader's Digest Association, Cape Town
- ^ Atlas of Southern Africa. (1984). p. 113. Reader's Digest Association, Cape Town
- ^ Sullivan, Helen (11 July 2023). "'Pure magic': snow falls on Johannesburg for first time in 11 years". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 28 June 2024. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
- ^ "These are the lowest ever temperatures recorded in South Africa". The South African. 1 July 2018. Archived from the original on 11 September 2020. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
- ^ "South Africa's geography". Safrica.info. Archived from the original on 8 June 2010. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
- ^ South Africa yearbook. South African Communication Service. 1997. p. 3. ISBN 9780797035447. Archived from the original on 24 January 2016. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
- ^ Republic of South Africa, National Climate Change Adaptation Strategy (NCCAS) Archived 12 June 2021 at the Wayback Machine, Version UE10, 13 November 2019.
- ^ "International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health". www.mdpi.com. Archived from the original on 10 June 2021. Retrieved 26 November 2020.
- ^ "South African National Biodiversity Institute". Sanbi.org. 30 September 2011. Archived from the original on 1 September 2011. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
- ^ "South Africa's Second National Climate Change Report". November 2017. Archived from the original on 14 June 2020. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
- ^ a b c "The Carbon Brief Profile: South Africa". Carbon Brief. 15 October 2018. Archived from the original on 9 May 2021. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
- ^ "List of Parties". Archived from the original on 24 January 2011. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
- ^ a b "South Africa's National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 May 2013. Retrieved 10 December 2012.
- ^ "Biodiversity of the world by countries". Institutoaqualung.com.br. Archived from the original on 1 November 2010. Retrieved 30 May 2010.
- ^ Rong, I. H.; Baxter, A. P. (2006). "The South African National Collection of Fungi: Celebrating a centenary 1905–2005". Studies in Mycology. 55: 1–12. doi:10.3114/sim.55.1.1. PMC 2104721. PMID 18490968.
- ^ Crous, P. W.; Rong, I. H.; Wood, A.; Lee, S.; Glen, H.; Botha, W. l; Slippers, B.; De Beer, W. Z.; Wingfield, M. J.; Hawksworth, D. L. (2006). "How many species of fungi are there at the tip of Africa?". Studies in Mycology. 55: 13–33. doi:10.3114/sim.55.1.13. PMC 2104731. PMID 18490969.
- ^ Marincowitz, S.; Crous, P.W.; Groenewald, J.Z. & Wingfield, M.J. (2008). "Microfungi occurring on Proteaceae in the fynbos. CBS Biodiversity Series 7" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 July 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ Lambertini, Marco (15 May 2000). "The Flora / The Richest Botany in the World". A Anturalist's Guide to the Tropics (Revised edition (15 May 2000) ed.). University Of Chicago Press. p. 46. ISBN 978-0-226-46828-0.
- ^ a b Trenchard, Tommy (31 July 2021). "In South Africa, Poachers Now Traffic in Tiny Succulent Plants". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 10 May 2022. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
- ^ "Plants and Vegetation in South Africa". Southafrica-travel.net. Archived from the original on 28 October 2011. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
- ^ Lewton, Robin Cherry & Thomas (5 March 2019). "South Africa's flammable floral kingdom". www.bbc.com. Archived from the original on 16 July 2022. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
- ^ Grantham, H. S.; et al. (2020). "Anthropogenic modification of forests means only 40% of remaining forests have high ecosystem integrity – Supplementary Material". Nature Communications. 11 (1): 5978. Bibcode:2020NatCo..11.5978G. doi:10.1038/s41467-020-19493-3. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 7723057. PMID 33293507.
- ^ Towards a policy on indigenous bush encroachment in South Africa (2019) Archived 19 April 2024 at the Wayback Machine, Department of Environmental Affairs, Pretoria, South Africa
- ^ "Progress in the war against poaching". Environmental Affairs. South Africa. 22 January 2015. Archived from the original on 23 January 2015. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
- ^ a b "2022 Census Statistical Release" (PDF). Statistics South Africa. 15 October 2023. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 October 2023. Retrieved 15 October 2023.
- ^ "World Population Prospects – Population Division – United Nations". population.un.org. Archived from the original on 17 June 2020.
- ^ "Anti-immigrant violence spreads in South Africa, with attacks reported in Cape Town – The New York Times". International Herald Tribune. 23 May 2008. Archived from the original on 21 February 2009. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
- ^ "Escape From Mugabe: Zimbabwe's Exodus". Archived from the original on 24 January 2016.
- ^ "More illegals set to flood SA". Fin24. Archived from the original on 14 February 2009. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
- ^ "South African mob kills migrants". BBC. 12 May 2008. Archived from the original on 13 March 2017. Retrieved 19 May 2008.
- ^ Bearak, Barry (23 May 2008). "Immigrants Fleeing Fury of South African Mobs". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 1 May 2011. Retrieved 5 August 2008.
- ^ Lehohla, Pali (5 May 2005). "Debate over race and censuses not peculiar to SA". Business Report. Archived from the original on 14 August 2007. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
Others pointed out that the repeal of the Population Registration Act in 1991 removed any legal basis for specifying 'race'. The Identification Act of 1997 makes no mention of race. On the other hand, the Employment Equity Act speaks of 'designated groups' being 'black people, women and people with disabilities'. The Act defines 'black' as referring to 'Africans, coloureds and Indians'. Apartheid and the racial identification which underpinned it explicitly linked race with differential access to resources and power. If the post-apartheid order was committed to remedying this, race would have to be included in surveys and censuses, so that progress in eradicating the consequences of apartheid could be measured and monitored. This was the reasoning that led to a 'self-identifying' question about 'race' or 'population group' in both the 1996 and 2001 population censuses, and in Statistics SA's household survey programme.
- ^ Study Commission on U.S. Policy toward Southern Africa (U.S.) (1981). South Africa: time running out: the report of the Study Commission on U.S. Policy Toward Southern Africa. University of California Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-520-04547-7. Archived from the original on 24 January 2016. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
- ^ a b c "World Refugee Survey 2008". U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants. 19 June 2008. Archived from the original on 19 October 2014.
- ^ "Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 – Chapter 1: Founding Provisions | South African Government". www.gov.za. Archived from the original on 18 May 2019. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
- ^ "South Africa's languages". 6 November 2007. Archived from the original on 26 June 2019. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
- ^ Staff Writer. "These are the most-spoken languages in South Africa in 2019". businesstech.co.za. Archived from the original on 21 February 2020. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
- ^ "The languages of South Africa". SouthAfrica.info. 4 February 1997. Archived from the original on 4 March 2011. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
- ^ "South Africa". The World Factbook. CIA. Archived from the original on 10 January 2021. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
- ^ "South Africa – Section I. Religious Demography". U.S. Department of State. Archived from the original on 14 June 2020. Retrieved 15 July 2006.
- ^ "South Africa". United States Department of State. Archived from the original on 7 December 2023. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
- ^ Bentley, Wessel; Dion Angus Forster (2008). "God's mission in our context, healing and transforming responses". Methodism in Southern Africa: A Celebration of Wesleyan Mission. AcadSA. pp. 97–98. ISBN 978-1-920212-29-2.
- ^ van Wyk, Ben-Erik; van Oudtshoorn, Gericke N (1999). Medicinal Plants of South Africa. Pretoria: Briza Publications. p. 10. ISBN 978-1-875093-37-3.
- ^ "South Africa". State.gov. 15 September 2006. Archived from the original on 14 June 2020. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
- ^ a b "In South Africa, many blacks convert to Islam / The Christian Science Monitor". The Christian Science Monitor. 10 January 2002. Archived from the original on 30 July 2013. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
- ^ "Muslims say their faith growing fast in Africa". Religionnewsblog.com. 15 November 2004. Archived from the original on 1 October 2010. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
- ^ SA Jewish history Archived 18 December 2023 at the Wayback Machine South African Jewish Board of Deputies
- ^ Umamah Bakharia (29 April 2025). "South Africa has second highest rate of literate adults in Africa". Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 1 May 2025.
- ^ a b "A parent's guide to schooling". Archived from the original on 22 July 2010. Retrieved 31 August 2010.
- ^ "Education in South Africa". SouthAfrica.info. Archived from the original on 17 June 2010. Retrieved 20 June 2010.
- ^ "TVET Colleges of South Africa". nationalgovernment.co.za. Retrieved 9 January 2025.
- ^ "FET Colleges". www.education.gov.za. Retrieved 9 January 2025.
- ^ Staff Reporter (1 February 2019). "Exploring FETs and TVETs as viable alternatives". The Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 9 January 2025.
- ^ "Bantu Education". Overcoming Apartheid. Archived from the original on 15 August 2020. Retrieved 20 June 2010.
- ^ Cele, S'thembile; Masondo, Sipho (18 January 2015). "Shocking cost of SA's universities". fin24.com. City Press. Archived from the original on 19 January 2015. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
- ^ "Peoples Budget Coalition Comments on the 2011/12 Budget". Archived from the original on 16 May 2012.
- ^ a b "'Clinic-in-a-Box' seeks to improve South African healthcare". SmartPlanet. Archived from the original on 30 July 2013. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
- ^ "South Africa". ICAP at Columbia University. Archived from the original on 13 July 2013. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
- ^ a b c "Motsoaledi to reform private health care". Financial Mail. Archived from the original on 7 July 2013. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
- ^ "What does the demand for healthcare look like in SA?" (PDF). Mediclinic Southern Africa. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 October 2013. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
- ^ "HIV and AIDS estimates (2015)". Archived from the original on 12 February 2015. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
- ^ "South Africa". www.unaids.org. Archived from the original on 28 August 2019. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- ^ "South Africa HIV & AIDS Statistics". AVERT.org. Archived from the original on 16 October 2015. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
- ^ a b "AIDS orphans". Avert. Archived from the original on 7 July 2010. Retrieved 8 October 2006.
- ^ "Sack SA Health Minister – world's AIDS experts". afrol News. Archived from the original on 18 October 2006. Retrieved 8 October 2006.
- ^ "Situation Analysis. HIV & AIDS and STI Strategic Plan 2007–2011" (PDF). info.gov.za. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 May 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ "Zuma announces AIDS reforms". UNPAN. Archived from the original on 27 December 2015. Retrieved 9 March 2010.
- ^ Mullick, Saiqa (December 2015). Bailey, Candice (ed.). "South Africa has excelled in treating HIV – prevention remains a disaster". doi:10.64628/AAJ.vygkpxsep. Archived from the original on 12 July 2018. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
- ^ "South African Cities And Provinces – A Complete List". dirkstrauss.com. 27 December 2018. Archived from the original on 7 May 2021. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
- ^ "Community Survey 2016: Provinces at a Glance" (PDF). Statistics South Africa. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
- ^ United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division (2018). "World Urbanization Prospects: The 2018 Revision, Online Edition". Retrieved 28 April 2019.
- ^ "Term Limits in Africa". The Economist. 6 April 2006. Archived from the original on 19 October 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ Akinwotu, Emmanuel (1 June 2024). "In a historic election, South Africa's ANC loses majority for the first time". NPR. Retrieved 26 August 2024.
- ^ Usher, Barbara Plett (14 June 2024). "A landmark moment in South Africa for a humbled ANC". BBC. Retrieved 26 August 2024.
- ^ "Chapter 4 – Parliament". 19 August 2009. Archived from the original on 30 May 2013. Retrieved 3 August 2013.
- ^ Alexander, Peter (27 March 2012). "Protests and Police Statistics: Some Commentary". Amandla. Archived from the original on 28 November 2023. Retrieved 8 April 2024.
- ^ Buccus, Imraan (27 August 2007). "Mercury: Rethinking the crisis of local democracy". Abahlali.org. Archived from the original on 19 October 2011. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
- ^ J. Duncan (31 May 2010). "The Return of State Repression". South African Civil Society Information Services. Archived from the original on 30 June 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ "Increasing police repression highlighted by recent case". Freedom of Expression Institute. 2006. Archived from the original on 20 January 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ "South Africa's recent performance in the Ibrahim Index of African Governance". Mo Ibrahim Foundation. Archived from the original on 18 February 2013. Retrieved 16 February 2013.
- ^ "SA marriage law signed". BBC News. 30 November 2006. Archived from the original on 20 November 2021. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ Wines, Michael (2 December 2005). "Same-Sex Unions to Become Legal in South Africa". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 10 October 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2018.
- ^ Snyman, Pamela & Barratt, Amanda (2 October 2002). "Researching South African Law". w/ Library Resource Xchange. Archived from the original on 17 June 2008. Retrieved 23 June 2008.
- ^ Rosenberg, Rosalind (Summer 2001). "Virginia Gildersleeve: Opening the Gates (Living Legacies)". Columbia Magazine. Archived from the original on 2 January 2004. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
- ^ Schlesinger, Stephen E. (2004). Act of Creation: The Founding of the United Nations: A Story of Superpowers, Secret Agents, Wartime Allies and Enemies, and Their Quest for a Peaceful World. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Westview, Perseus Books Group. pp. 236–7. ISBN 978-0-8133-3275-8.
- ^ "China, South Africa upgrade relations to "comprehensive strategic partnership"". Capetown.china-consulate.org. 25 August 2010. Archived from the original on 31 July 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ "New era as South Africa joins BRICS". Southafrica.info. 11 April 2011. Archived from the original on 18 April 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ "SA brings 'unique attributes' to BRICS". Southafrica.info. 14 April 2011. Archived from the original on 9 July 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ a b "Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 200 of 1993 (Section 224)". South African Government. 1993. Archived from the original on 12 June 2008. Retrieved 23 June 2008.
- ^ L. B. van Stade (1997). "Rationalisation in the SANDF: The Next Challenge". Institute for Security Studies. Archived from the original on 16 March 2016. Retrieved 23 June 2008.
- ^ "Defence Act 42 of 2002" (PDF). South African Government. 12 February 2003. p. 18. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 June 2008. Retrieved 23 June 2008.
- ^ "Career Descriptions – S. A. National Defence Force". www.bmdnet.co.za. Archived from the original on 14 April 2023. Retrieved 12 April 2023.
- ^ a b c Lekota, Mosiuoa (5 September 2005). "Address by the Minister of Defence at a media breakfast at Defence Headquarters, Pretoria". Department of Defence. Archived from the original on 14 December 2007. Retrieved 23 June 2008.
- ^ Martin, Guy (5 May 2021). "SA defence budget falling to only .86% of GDP". defenceWeb. Archived from the original on 28 February 2023. Retrieved 12 April 2023.
- ^ Martin, Guy (1 July 2025). ""A fine place, worth fighting for": Why South Africa needs urgent defence funding". defenceWeb. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
- ^ "EFF demands R114 billion budget boost as SANDF faces chronic funding crisis". defenceWeb. August 2025.
- ^ "South Africa: An Overview of the Defence Industry". ciaotest.cc.columbia.edu. Archived from the original on 6 April 2023. Retrieved 14 April 2023.
- ^ Lionel, Ekene (28 November 2017). "Here are some of South African Made weapons". Military Africa. Archived from the original on 8 January 2023. Retrieved 9 March 2023.
- ^ Martin, Guy (16 April 2024). "The MRAP bubble – Has it burst? - defenceWeb". defenceWeb. Archived from the original on 18 April 2025. Retrieved 12 August 2025.
- ^ a b c Roy E. Horton III (October 1999). "Out of (South) Africa: Pretoria's Nuclear Weapons Experience". USAF Institute for National Security Studies. Archived from the original on 6 May 2008. Retrieved 23 June 2008.
- ^ Dodson, Christine (22 October 1979). "South Atlantic Nuclear Event (National Security Council, Memorandum)" (PDF). George Washington University under Freedom of Information Act Request. Archived (PDF) from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 23 June 2008.
- ^ "South Africa comes clean". Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists: Science and Public Affairs. Educational Foundation for Nuclear Science, Inc. May 1993. pp. 3–4. ISSN 0096-3402. Archived from the original on 11 October 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ Bloomberg. "South Africa still owns highly enriched uranium, report says". Engineering News. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
- ^ Poplak, Richard (16 March 2015). "Things That Goes Boom: Is South African uranium the biggest threat to world peace?". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
- ^ "TerraPower plans to invest in South African HALEU laser enrichment technology". www.ans.org. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
- ^ "Chapter XXVI: Disarmament – No. 9 Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons". United Nations Treaty Collection. 7 July 2017. Archived from the original on 13 August 2021. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- ^ "UNODA Treaties". treaties.unoda.org.
- ^ "South Africa Yearbook 2019/20 | Government Communication and Information System (GCIS)". www.gcis.gov.za. Archived from the original on 2 March 2023. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
- ^ Mitchley, Alex. "Best in Africa: SAPS' Special Task Force Unit places ninth at international SWAT competition". News24. Archived from the original on 2 March 2023. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
- ^ Martin, Guy (30 October 2012). "South Africa has world's largest private security industry; needs regulation – Mthethwa". defenceWeb. Archived from the original on 9 April 2023. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
- ^ "Security guards vs police officers in South Africa". BusinessTech. 13 May 2021. Archived from the original on 9 April 2023.
- ^ Eastwood, Victoria (8 February 2013). "Bigger than the army: South Africa's private security forces | CNN Business". CNN. Archived from the original on 9 April 2023. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
- ^ "Recent Growth In The Private Security Industry". Building Security Services. Archived from the original on 28 June 2024. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
- ^ "Africa: countries with highest crime index 2024". Statista. Retrieved 13 August 2025.
- ^ Staff Writer. "Here's how South Africa's crime rate compares to actual warzones". businesstech.co.za. Archived from the original on 19 July 2019. Retrieved 19 July 2019.
- ^ Govender, Indiran (31 March 2023). "Gender-based violence - An increasing epidemic in South Africa". South African Family Practice. 65 (1): e1 – e2. doi:10.4102/safp.v65i1.5729. ISSN 2078-6204. PMC 10091185. PMID 37042525.
- ^ "Global Study on Homicide – Statistics and Data". dataunodc.un.org. Archived from the original on 15 July 2019. Retrieved 19 July 2019.
- ^ "Countries with the highest rape incidents". The Business Standard. 13 October 2020. Retrieved 24 July 2025.
- ^ "GUIDE: Rape statistics in South Africa – Africa Check". Archived from the original on 25 March 2019. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
- ^ Gibson, Douglas (3 March 2020). "SA's murder rate is worse than the coronavirus mortality rate". iol.co.za. IOL. Archived from the original on 4 August 2021. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
- ^ "Rising Cape Town Gang Violence Is Yet Another Legacy of Apartheid". Bloomberg.com.
- ^ Dziewanski, Dariusz (15 July 2020). "It's hard to leave a Cape Town gang. But these men's stories show that it's possible". The Conversation. Retrieved 23 July 2025.
- ^ "Review of the Criminal Justice System | South African Government". www.gov.za. Retrieved 13 August 2025.
- ^ Stats in Brief, 2010 (PDF). Pretoria: Statistics South Africa. 2010. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-621-39563-1. Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 August 2018. Retrieved 14 January 2011.
- ^ "JSE Trading Hours & Market Holidays [2023]". www.tradinghours.com. Archived from the original on 26 March 2023. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- ^ "South Africa - Market Overview". www.trade.gov. 26 January 2024. Retrieved 23 July 2025.
- ^ "Economy". South African Embassy Paris, France. Retrieved 23 July 2025.
- ^ Agency, Content Works; Charlotte (19 February 2025). "Forex Trading in Africa - A 2025 Outlook". Contentworks. Retrieved 12 July 2025.
- ^ "JSE Trading Hours & Market Holidays [2023]". www.tradinghours.com. Archived from the original on 26 March 2023. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- ^ "African Countries of the Future 2013/14". fDiIntelligence.com. 9 August 2013. Archived from the original on 11 December 2013. Retrieved 4 December 2013.
- ^ "Inequality in income or expenditure / Gini index, Human Development Report 2007/08". Hdrstats.undp.org. 4 November 2010. Archived from the original on 16 January 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ "Distribution of family income – Gini index". Cia.gov. Archived from the original on 13 June 2007. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ "South Africa has highest gap between rich and poor". Business Report. 28 September 2009. Archived from the original on 23 October 2011. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
- ^ "South Africa: assets of financial institutions". Statista. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
- ^ "South Africa: finance sector's value added to GDP 2015-2023". Statista. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
- ^ "Standard Bank Group (SBK.JO) - Total assets". companiesmarketcap.com. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
- ^ "Standard Bank Ranked As Africa's Most Valuable Banking Brand For A Third Consecutive Year". www.forbesafrica.com. 19 April 2024. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
- ^ "Top 10 Stock Exchange Markets in Africa 2025". The African Exponent. 15 April 2025. Retrieved 7 September 2025.
- ^ South African Reserve Bank Annual Report 2024/25 (Report). South African Reserve Bank. 30 June 2025.
- ^ "SA has the 6th highest number of shopping malls in the world". Retrieved 20 July 2025.
- ^ "naamsa | Automotive exports surge 19% to new highs". Retrieved 11 July 2025.
- ^ "2024 Statistics | www.oica.net". www.oica.net. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
- ^ "SA has the 6th highest number of shopping malls in the world". Retrieved 20 July 2025.
- ^ Africa, FASA Franchise Association South (16 October 2018). "Survey shows SA has the sixth most shopping centre space in the world". Franchise Association South Africa. Retrieved 20 July 2025.
- ^ Herbster, Donovan (17 May 2020). "Nando's - The world's most popular chicken restaurant". fooddigital.com. Retrieved 15 July 2025.
- ^ success, Your trusted source for investing. "Top 10 Gold Reserves by Country | INN". investingnews.com. Retrieved 7 September 2025.
- ^ "USGS Platinum Production Statistics" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
- ^ "USGS Chromium Production Statistics" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 11 May 2021. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
- ^ "USGS Manganese Production Statistics" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 25 June 2021. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
- ^ "USGS Vanadinum Production Statistics" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 13 April 2021. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
- ^ "USGS Titanium Production Statistics" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
- ^ "USGS Minerals Information: Mineral Commodity Summaries". minerals.USGS.gov. Retrieved 4 January 2018.
- ^ "Mineral Commodity Summaries 2025 – Iron Ore" (PDF). United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 22 April 2025.
- ^ "World Uranium Mining - World Nuclear Association". www.world-nuclear.org. Retrieved 8 December 2024.
- ^ cycles, This text provides general information Statista assumes no liability for the information given being complete or correct Due to varying update; Text, Statistics Can Display More up-to-Date Data Than Referenced in the. "Topic: Wine industry in South Africa". Statista. Retrieved 20 July 2025.
- ^ a b Unequal protection the state response to violent crime on South African farms. Human Rights Watch. 2001. ISBN 978-1-56432-263-0. Archived from the original on 1 February 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2016.
- ^ Mohamed, Najma (2000). "Greening Land and Agrarian Reform: A Case for Sustainable Agriculture". In Ben Cousins (ed.). At the Crossroads: Land and Agrarian Reform in South Africa Into the 21st Century. Programme for Land and Agrarian Studies (PLAAS). ISBN 978-1-86808-467-8.
- ^ "South Africa". The World Factbook. CIA. Archived from the original on 10 January 2021. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
- ^ World Intellectual Property Organization (2024). Global Innovation Index 2024: Unlocking the Promise of Social Entrepreneurship. World Intellectual Property Organization. p. 18. doi:10.34667/tind.50062. ISBN 978-92-805-3681-2. Retrieved 6 October 2024.
- ^ "About Thawte - SSL and Code Signing Certificates from Thawte, Inc". www.thawte.com. Retrieved 11 May 2024.
- ^ "SKA announces Founding Board and selects Jodrell Bank Observatory to host Project Office". SKA 2011. 2 April 2011. Archived from the original on 29 October 2012. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
- ^ a b FinGlobal (11 June 2020). "South African inventions: What is South Africa famous for?". FinGlobal. Retrieved 13 August 2025.
- ^ "A history of helmet mounted displays | Request PDF". ResearchGate. Archived from the original on 8 November 2022. Retrieved 13 August 2025.
- ^ "South Africa's economy: How it could do even better". The Economist. 22 July 2010. Archived from the original on 12 March 2012. Retrieved 17 October 2011.
- ^ "DEPWeb: Beyond Economic Growth". The World Bank Group. Archived from the original on 6 November 2011. Retrieved 17 October 2011.
- ^ "The World Bank In South Africa". Archived from the original on 28 May 2020. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
- ^ "South Africa, Egypt, and Nigeria account for 56% of Africa's wealth". Quartz. 15 September 2022. Archived from the original on 4 February 2023. Retrieved 4 February 2023.
- ^ a b c Mthobisi Nozulela (14 May 2025). "Government plan aims to boost South Africa's tourism employment to 2. 5 million by 2029". MSN. Retrieved 14 May 2025.
- ^ Sibuliso Duba (25 July 2025). "SA ranked fourth-best country in the world as tourism flourishes". CapeTown ETC. Retrieved 27 July 2025.
- ^ "Travel & Tourism Economic Impact 2013 South Africa" (PDF). WTTC. March 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 March 2014. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
- ^ "3,5 million travellers to South Africa". Statistics South Africa. 25 October 2017. Retrieved 24 November 2017.
- ^ "Roads – The Department of Transport". Retrieved 5 July 2025.
- ^ "SANRAL". www.nra.co.za. Archived from the original on 15 September 2018. Retrieved 5 July 2025.
- ^ "Railways - The World Factbook". www.cia.gov. Retrieved 5 July 2025.
- ^ "South Africa Transnet Freight Rail". www.trade.gov. 5 April 2022. Archived from the original on 7 March 2023. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
- ^ "South Africa – Rail Infrastructure". www.trade.gov. Archived from the original on 7 March 2023. Retrieved 6 March 2023.
- ^ "South Africa's first bullet train planned". Retrieved 24 July 2025.
- ^ "High-speed trains for South Africa are coming: Ramaphosa". Retrieved 24 July 2025.
- ^ "Airports – The World Factbook". www.cia.gov. Archived from the original on 3 April 2022. Retrieved 2 April 2023.
- ^ Yadav, Lalit (2 December 2021). "These 7 Awesome Airports In South Africa Are Making Travel Easy". Archived from the original on 2 April 2023. Retrieved 2 April 2023.
- ^ Theafricalogistics (8 July 2019). "Top 10 largest airports in Africa". The Africa Logistics. Archived from the original on 2 April 2023. Retrieved 2 April 2023.
- ^ "Cape Town International Airport awarded title of best airport globally". Cape Town ETC. 12 July 2025. Retrieved 19 July 2025.
- ^ "Cape Town International Airport ranked best airport in the world - SABC News - Breaking news, special reports, world, business, sport coverage of all South African current events. Africa's news leader". SABC News - Breaking news, special reports, world, business, sport coverage of all South African current events. Africa\'s news leader. 12 July 2025. Archived from the original on 16 July 2025. Retrieved 19 July 2025.
- ^ Agbetiloye, Adekunle (26 March 2024). "10 African countries with the highest number of aircraft in 2024". Business Insider Africa. Retrieved 5 July 2025.
- ^ Polito, Sebastián (29 May 2025). "South African Airways rebuilding its wide body fleet". Flightradar24 Blog. Retrieved 5 July 2025.
- ^ "Port Terminals 2019" (PDF). TransNet. 2019.
- ^ "halong bay cruise overnight". Retrieved 29 March 2023.
- ^ "Port of Richards Bay, South Africa". www.findaport.com. Retrieved 24 July 2025.
- ^ "Transnet - Port of Cape Town" (PDF). Transnet.
- ^ "The bottleneck". The Economist. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 24 July 2025.
- ^ "Koeberg Nuclear Power Station Refurbishment – NS Energy". Archived from the original on 5 August 2022. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
- ^ "Electricity Comparison - The World Factbook". www.cia.gov. Retrieved 5 July 2025.
- ^ Prater, Tom (15 October 2018). "The Carbon Brief Profile: South Africa". Carbon Brief. Archived from the original on 14 February 2023. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
- ^ "100 Years – Eskom Heritage". www.eskom.co.za. 11 November 2022. Archived from the original on 23 April 2023. Retrieved 22 April 2023.
- ^ "Coal fired power stations – Eskom". www.eskom.co.za. 16 February 2021. Archived from the original on 27 January 2023. Retrieved 23 April 2023.
- ^ a b Sguazzin, Antony; Naidoo, Prinesha; Burkhardt, Paul. "Eskom turns 100 next year – here's how it went from world best to SA's biggest economic risk". Business. Archived from the original on 23 April 2023. Retrieved 22 April 2023.
- ^ "Problems at Eskom Identified as a Main Cause of SA's Energy Crisis". College of Agriculture, Engineering and Science. 31 May 2021. Archived from the original on 7 April 2023. Retrieved 2 April 2023.
- ^ a b "Open Infrastructure Map". openinframap.org. Retrieved 19 August 2025.
- ^ "World Bank Open Data". World Bank Open Data. Retrieved 27 July 2025.
- ^ "Engineering News – Kusile power plant project, South Africa – update". Engineering News. Archived from the original on 2 March 2023. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
- ^ "How Eskom & The Government Can Put An End To Loadshedding in South Africa". Greenpeace Africa. Archived from the original on 31 March 2023. Retrieved 2 April 2023.
- ^ "Top executive linked to acts of sabotage at Eskom: report". Retrieved 27 July 2025.
- ^ Diemen, Ethan van (4 March 2023). "Eskom sabotage: how cartels plunge South Africa into darkness". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 6 October 2024.
- ^ Yelland, Chris (7 January 2023). "Attempted murder of departing Eskom CEO Andre De Ruyter reported to SAPS". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 27 July 2025.
- ^ Nicolson, Greg (22 February 2023). "André de Ruyter released from Eskom 'with immediate effect' following explosive interview". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 27 July 2025.
- ^ Eyaaz (18 December 2022). "Army deployed to Eskom power plants amid security threats". The Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 27 July 2025.
- ^ "Four Eskom employees and a contractor security guard arrested for theft of heavy fuel oil at Camden Power Station - Eskom". www.eskom.co.za. 21 August 2024. Retrieved 27 July 2025.
- ^ "Eskom's ongoing collaboration with law enforcement leads to six arrests for procurement fraud - Eskom". www.eskom.co.za. 15 March 2025. Retrieved 27 July 2025.
- ^ "Coal fired power stations - Eskom". www.eskom.co.za. 16 February 2021. Retrieved 7 July 2025.
- ^ "18 years and R467 billion later — Most expensive mistakes in the history of Eskom". Retrieved 7 July 2025.
- ^ Burger, Schalk. "Final 800 MW Kusile Unit 6 added to electricity grid". Engineering News. Retrieved 27 July 2025.
- ^ "South Africa load-shedding: How Eskom has kept the lights on". www.bbc.com. 6 August 2024. Retrieved 6 October 2024.
- ^ "South Africa seeks new nuclear allies in Russia and Iran as U.S. influence fades – Necsa". 17 February 2025. Retrieved 7 July 2025.
- ^ "South Africa pushes ahead with new Cape nuclear plant". Reuters. 8 August 2025. Retrieved 19 August 2025.
- ^ "NECSA WELCOMES CONFIRMATION OF A NUCLEAR SITE FOR SOUTH AFRICA'S NEXT NUCLEAR POWER STATION – Necsa". Retrieved 19 August 2025.
- ^ "Telecommunications Infrastructure in South Africa". ICA. Retrieved 15 July 2025.
- ^ "MTN Group Limited" (PDF). MTN Group Limited.
- ^ "The 5 African Countries That Have Launched 5G Services So Far". itnewsafrica.com. 25 May 2022.
- ^ "Vodacom launches Africa's first live 5G network which supports both mobile and fixed wireless services | Vodacom Group". www.vodacom.com. Retrieved 15 July 2025.
- ^ Odendaal, Natasha. "South Africa's telecommunications growth boosted by fibre, expanding network coverage". Engineering News. Retrieved 15 July 2025.
- ^ "Elon Musk's Starlink faces fresh roadblock in South Africa amid tech sovereignty dispute". Business Insider Africa. 12 July 2025. Retrieved 15 July 2025.
- ^ "TV – DTT (Digital Terrestrial Television) | Sentech". www.sentech.co.za. 21 June 2024. Retrieved 15 July 2025.
- ^ "All the undersea cables connecting South Africa to the rest of the world". Retrieved 15 July 2025.
- ^ a b WHO/UNICEF:Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation:Data table South Africa Archived 9 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine, 2010. Retrieved 3 November 2012
- ^ "Professor Says Cape Town Crisis Should Serve as a 'Wakeup Call to All Major U.S. Cities'". www.newswise.com. Archived from the original on 14 June 2018. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
- ^ a b Hewitson, Bruce (19 October 2017). Patel, Ozayr (ed.). "Why Cape Town's drought was so hard to forecast". doi:10.64628/AAJ.vfseu9yet. Archived from the original on 11 July 2018. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
- ^ "The 11 cities most likely to run out of drinking water – like Cape Town" Archived 13 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine 11 February 2018. BBC News.
- ^ In drought-hit South Africa, the politics of water Archived 22 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine, Reuters, 25 January 2018
- ^ Cape Town May Dry Up Because of an Aversion to Israel Archived 14 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine, Wall St. Journal, 21 February 2018
- ^ The Cape Town Water Crisis and Hating Israel Archived 14 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine, aish, 11 February 2018
- ^ South African stupidity Archived 14 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine, Jerusalem Post, 3 February 2018
- ^ "Black middle class explodes". FIN24. 22 May 2007. Archived from the original on 22 August 2007.
- ^ "South Africa Black Middle-Class Demographic Study 2023". Yahoo Finance. 4 May 2023. Retrieved 5 November 2023.
- ^ Radford, Tim (16 April 2004). "World's Oldest Jewellery Found in Cave". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 12 February 2021. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
- ^ "South African music after Apartheid: kwaito, the "party politic," and the appropriation of gold as a sign of success". Archived from the original on 13 June 2013.
- ^ "The Nobel Prize in Literature: John Maxwell Coetzee". Swedish Academy. 2 October 2003. Archived from the original on 7 March 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
- ^ André Brink (1985). "Introduction". A Season in Paradise. London: Faber and Faber. p. 11. ISBN 0-571-13491-2.
- ^ Goodwin, June. "Novel for foreigners who want to understand the Afrikaner; A Dry White Season, by Andre Brink. New York: William Morrow & Co. $10.95". Christian Science Monitor. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
- ^ Herbster, Donovan (17 May 2020). "Nando's - The world's most popular chicken restaurant". fooddigital.com. Retrieved 15 July 2025.
- ^ "KFC". Yum. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
- ^ "The two South Africans who built a global powerhouse – outperforming Apple and Microsoft". Retrieved 15 July 2025.
- ^ "South African Wine Guide: Stellenbosch, Constantia, Walker Bay and more". Thewinedoctor.com. Archived from the original on 18 January 2013. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
- ^ "Sport in South Africa". SouthAfrica.info. Archived from the original on 29 June 2010. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
- ^ Sport in South Africa topendsports.com, accessed 3 December 2020.
- ^ "Blacks like soccer, whites like rugby in SA". Archived from the original on 25 May 2021. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
- ^ "SA sport not the unifier it once was: survey". eNCA. Archived from the original on 25 May 2021. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
- ^ "Analysis: Bafana Bafana Struggling To Make Needed Improvements". 11 June 2016. Archived from the original on 25 May 2021. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
- ^ Cooper, Billy (12 July 2010). "South Africa gets 9/10 for World Cup". Mail & Guardian. Archived from the original on 15 July 2010. Retrieved 9 September 2010.
- ^ "New Zealand 11-12 South Africa: Springboks win record fourth Rugby World Cup in dramatic final". BBC Sport. 28 October 2023. Retrieved 1 November 2023.
- ^ "Blind Cricket South Africa". www.blindcricketsa.co.za.
- ^ Mike Hall (18 May 2022). "Which Players Have Won A Golf Grand Slam?". Golf Monthly Magazine.
Further reading
[edit]- A History of South Africa, Third Edition. Leonard Thompson. Yale University Press. 2001. 384 pages. ISBN 0-300-08776-4.
- Economic Analysis and Policy Formulation for Post-Apartheid South Africa: Mission Report, Aug. 1991. International Development Research Centre. IDRC Canada, 1991. vi, 46 p. Without ISBN.
- Emerging Johannesburg: Perspectives on the Postapartheid City. Richard Tomlinson, et al. 2003. 336 pages. ISBN 0-415-93559-8
- Making of Modern South Africa: Conquest, Segregation and Apartheid. Nigel Worden. 2000. 194 pages. ISBN 0-631-21661-8.
- South Africa: A Narrative History. Frank Welsh. Kodansha America. 1999. 606 pages. ISBN 1-56836-258-7
- South Africa in Contemporary Times. Godfrey Mwakikagile. New Africa Press. 2008. 260 pages. ISBN 978-0-9802587-3-8.
- The Atlas of Changing South Africa. A. J. Christopher. 2000. 216 pages. ISBN 0-415-21178-6.
- The Politics of the New South Africa. Heather Deegan. 2000. 256 pages. ISBN 0-582-38227-0.
- Twentieth-Century South Africa. William Beinart Oxford University Press 2001, 414 pages, ISBN 0-19-289318-1.
External links
[edit]- Government of South Africa
- South Africa. The World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency.
- South Africa from UCB Libraries GovPubs
- South Africa from the BBC News
Wikimedia Atlas of South Africa
Geographic data related to South Africa at OpenStreetMap
South Africa
View on GrokipediaThe Republic of South Africa is a parliamentary republic situated at the southernmost tip of the African continent, bordered by Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Eswatini, and Lesotho, with coastlines along the Atlantic and Indian Oceans.[1][2] It encompasses an area of approximately 1,220,000 square kilometers and has a population estimated at 63 million as of 2024, characterized by significant ethnic diversity including Black Africans, Coloureds, Whites, and Indians.[2][1] The country maintains three capital cities—Pretoria (administrative), Cape Town (legislative), and Bloemfontein (judicial)—and recognizes twelve official languages, reflecting its multicultural society.[1][2] South Africa's economy, the largest on the continent, relies heavily on mining (notably platinum and gold), manufacturing, agriculture, and services, with a nominal GDP of around $426 billion in recent estimates, though real per capita GDP has been contracting amid structural challenges.[1][3][4] Official unemployment stands at over 33 percent, with youth rates exceeding 60 percent, while the nation exhibits the world's highest income inequality as measured by the Gini coefficient.[5][6] Persistent issues include frequent power outages known as load shedding due to mismanagement at state utility Eskom, high levels of violent crime, and entrenched corruption that have eroded infrastructure and investor confidence since the end of apartheid.[7][5][8] Historically, European settlement began with Dutch colonization in 1652, followed by British control, Anglo-Boer Wars, and the formation of the Union of South Africa in 1910, culminating in the National Party's implementation of apartheid—a system of institutionalized racial segregation—in 1948.[1][9] This policy, which classified the population by race and enforced separate development, persisted until the early 1990s amid internal resistance, international sanctions, and negotiations leading to its dismantling and the country's first multiracial elections in 1994, which brought Nelson Mandela to power.[1][10] Today, under President Cyril Ramaphosa's leadership in a coalition government formed after the African National Congress lost its parliamentary majority in 2024, South Africa grapples with addressing apartheid's legacies alongside governance failures that have stalled economic progress and exacerbated social divisions.[11][1]
Etymology
Name origin and historical usage
The name "South Africa" derives directly from the country's location at the southern extremity of the African continent, serving as a geographical descriptor adopted by European explorers and settlers to distinguish the region from the rest of Africa. This naming convention emerged in the context of European maritime and colonial expansion, where the Cape of Good Hope and surrounding territories were identified as the southern anchor point for trade routes to Asia, without reference to indigenous nomenclature, as pre-colonial societies in the area operated through decentralized kingdoms and chiefdoms lacking a unified territorial designation. The term entered documented English usage around 1815, referring to the distinct region in southern Africa that had undergone partial European settlement, particularly under Dutch and subsequent British administration in the Cape Colony. During the 19th century, "South Africa" gained traction in British imperial discourse to encompass the expanding frontier zones, including the Boer republics and coastal colonies, amid conflicts such as the frontier wars and the Anglo-Boer Wars (1880–1881 and 1899–1902), where it denoted the collective lands south of the Zambezi River under varying degrees of European control.[12] This usage reflected strategic and administrative interests rather than ethnic or cultural unity, as the area comprised diverse African polities alongside settler communities. The name was formalized politically with the creation of the Union of South Africa on May 31, 1910, through the unification of the British colonies of the Cape, Natal, Transvaal, and Orange River under the South Africa Act passed by the British Parliament.[13] This entity, initially a dominion within the British Empire, adopted "South Africa" as its shorthand official title, emphasizing the merger of territories forged by conquest, migration, and mineral discoveries like the Witwatersrand gold rush of 1886.[13] In 1961, following a referendum on October 5, 1960, the Union became the Republic of South Africa upon secession from the Commonwealth, retaining the core name while underscoring its sovereign status amid global decolonization pressures.[14] Post-1994 democratic transition, the name persisted as the Republic of South Africa, enshrined in the 1996 Constitution, despite proposals for alternatives like "Azania" from certain nationalist groups, which lacked historical precedent and were not adopted.[15]History
Prehistory and early human settlements
South Africa's prehistory features pivotal evidence of hominin evolution, concentrated in the Cradle of Humankind, a UNESCO World Heritage site northwest of Johannesburg encompassing numerous limestone caves with fossils spanning over 3 million years.[16] Key discoveries include the Taung child skull, unearthed in 1924 and identified as Australopithecus africanus dating to approximately 2.8 million years ago, marking the first major australopithecine find.[17] At Sterkfontein cave, fossils initially dated to around 2.5 million years were redated in 2022 to 3.4–3.6 million years using uranium-lead dating on cave flowstones, including the nearly complete skeleton known as Little Foot (StW 573) at 3.67 million years.[18][19] These sites also yielded A. africanus remains from 3.3 to 2.1 million years ago, exhibiting bipedalism alongside arboreal adaptations.[20] Later hominin evidence includes Homo naledi fossils from the Rising Star Cave system, dated via multiple methods to 236,000–335,000 years ago, representing a small-brained species with mosaic primitive and modern traits coexisting with early Homo sapiens.[21] Anatomically modern Homo sapiens emerged in Africa around 300,000 years ago, with South African Middle Stone Age sites providing the earliest indications of complex behaviors such as heat-treated tool production and symbolic artifacts dating to 300,000–30,000 years ago.[22][23] Genetic and archaeological data suggest a southern African refugium as a potential cradle for modern human ancestry around 200,000 years ago, though this remains debated amid evidence from eastern and northern Africa.[24][25] Archaeological sequences divide into the Earlier Stone Age (ESA, ~2 million–300,000 years ago) with Acheulean handaxes, the Middle Stone Age (MSA, ~300,000–30,000 years ago) featuring Levallois techniques and hafted points indicative of advanced planning, and the Later Stone Age (LSA, ~50,000–2,000 years ago) characterized by microlithic tools, bows, and intensified foraging by hunter-gatherer groups ancestral to the Khoisan peoples.[26][27] These LSA populations, primarily San (Bushmen) foragers, maintained small, mobile bands exploiting diverse ecosystems from coastal shell middens to inland rock shelters.[26] San rock art, executed in caves and shelters across regions like the Drakensberg and Cederberg, dates back at least 10,000 years with motifs depicting eland hunts, trances, and therianthropes linked to shamanistic practices, reflecting a worldview where art channeled spiritual potency rather than mere narrative.[28][29] These engravings and paintings, created using ochre and charcoal, persisted until historic times as San groups faced displacement, providing enduring evidence of continuous hunter-gatherer occupation predating pastoralist arrivals.[30] Early settlements thus comprised egalitarian bands with sophisticated ecological knowledge, evidenced by tool kits adapted to arid and temperate zones, though population densities remained low due to environmental constraints.[26]Bantu expansions and pre-colonial kingdoms
The Bantu expansion originated approximately 5,000 to 4,000 years ago in West-Central Africa, near present-day Cameroon and Nigeria, where proto-Bantu speakers developed ironworking, crop cultivation including sorghum and millet, and cattle herding.[31][32] These technological advantages facilitated gradual southward and eastward migrations, with Bantu-speaking groups reaching the fringes of southern Africa around 2,000 to 1,500 years ago.[33] Archaeological evidence, including Early Iron Age sites with characteristic pottery and iron artifacts, indicates initial Bantu settlements in what is now South Africa around 300 CE, primarily in the eastern and northern regions such as Limpopo and KwaZulu-Natal.[32][34] This migration led to significant demographic shifts, as Bantu pastoralists and farmers expanded into territories occupied by Khoisan hunter-gatherers and herders, who lacked comparable agricultural technologies.[34] Genetic studies reveal admixture between Bantu arrivals and Khoisan populations, but also large-scale replacement of Khoisan ancestry in many areas, with Khoisan groups retreating to ecologically marginal zones like the Kalahari Desert and the southwestern Cape.[35][34] Interactions involved trade, intermarriage, and conflict, with Bantu groups often dominating through superior numbers, mobility via cattle, and weaponry, though not systematic extermination.[36] By the second millennium CE, Bantu-speaking societies comprised the majority in eastern, central, and northern South Africa, while Khoisan persisted in the west and south.[37] The consolidation of Bantu groups into complex polities marked the rise of pre-colonial kingdoms, with the Kingdom of Mapungubwe (c. 1075–c. 1300 CE), which flourished in the 13th century with its elite settlement developing around 1220 CE and peaking thereafter, representing the earliest known state-level society in southern Africa.[38] Located at the confluence of the Shashe and Limpopo rivers, Mapungubwe featured a stratified class system, with elite burials on a hilltop site adorned in gold artifacts, glass beads, and ivory, evidencing long-distance trade networks extending to the Indian Ocean coast for export of gold, ivory, and copper to East Africa, the Middle East, and India.[38][39] Archaeological excavations uncovered over 400 gold objects and imported Chinese celadon porcelain, underscoring economic sophistication and centralized authority under a divine kingship.[40] The kingdom declined around 1290–1300 CE, possibly due to climatic or ecological pressures, giving way to successor states like Great Zimbabwe to the north, while influencing later Bantu polities in the region.[39] Subsequent pre-colonial entities included decentralized chiefdoms among Nguni (e.g., Xhosa, Zulu ancestors), Sotho-Tswana, and Venda groups, which evolved into larger kingdoms by the 18th century through processes of amalgamation, warfare, and tribute systems.[36] These societies practiced mixed farming, with cattle central to social status and ritual, and engaged in iron production and beadwork, but lacked the monumental stone architecture of Mapungubwe, relying instead on wooden palisades and kraals.[38] Oral traditions and archaeological data confirm ongoing territorial expansions and alliances, setting the stage for 19th-century mfecane disruptions among these polities.[36]European exploration and initial settlements
European exploration of South Africa's coast commenced with Portuguese voyages in the late 15th century, driven by the pursuit of a sea route to India bypassing Ottoman-controlled land paths. In 1488, Bartolomeu Dias led an expedition that became the first to round the Cape of Good Hope undetected amid storms off the southern coast in late 1487; continuing eastward, the ships sighted land near the present-day Mossel Bay on February 3, proceeded further to the vicinity of the Great Fish River, and erected a padrão—a stone cross inscribed with the Portuguese coat of arms—at Kwaaihoek in March before turning back. Dias named the promontory Cabo das Tormentas (Cape of Storms) for the tempests encountered, though King John II later redesignated it Cape of Good Hope to signify the optimistic passage to eastern riches. Vasco da Gama's 1497 expedition built on Dias's achievement, anchoring at St. Helena Bay on November 4, where the crew landed for repairs and water; Khoikhoi inhabitants approached on the shoreline for trade, but a misunderstanding escalated into violence, with the Khoikhoi throwing spears that wounded da Gama in the thigh and Portuguese responding by killing several locals using crossbows.[41] The fleet rounded the cape on November 22 amid favorable weather, proceeding to Mossel Bay for repairs and water before continuing to India, thus establishing the viability of the route.[41] Portuguese mariners thereafter frequented the Cape region for resupply—stopping at Table Bay for fresh water, meat from Khoikhoi herders, and repairs—but established no permanent settlements, prioritizing trading forts farther east in Mozambique and India over the Cape's marginal agricultural potential and frequent gales.[42] Over 150 years later, the Dutch East India Company (VOC) addressed provisioning challenges on its Asia voyages—where scurvy claimed up to half of crews—by authorizing a refreshment station at the Cape. On April 6, 1652, Jan van Riebeeck arrived in Table Bay aboard the Dromedaris with two other ships carrying approximately 90 people, including company servants, soldiers, women, and possibly children, primarily gardeners and artisans, to cultivate vegetables and maintain livestock pens.[43] The settlers constructed Fort de Goede Hoop from clay and timber, planted wheat, barley, and fruit trees, and bartered iron tools and tobacco for Khoikhoi cattle and sheep, initially fostering trade relations with the Peninsular Khoikhoi under leaders like Autshumato.[43] [44] The outpost expanded modestly as VOC ships proved the site's utility, with van Riebeeck enforcing strict controls to prevent private trade or inland ventures. In 1657, to bolster food production, the company released nine company servants as vrijburghers (free burghers)—Dutch and German farmers granted land east of the Liesbeek River—to establish private farms, marking the inception of European agrarian settlement beyond the fort.[45] Tensions with Khoikhoi escalated over competition for pasture and water, culminating in the First Khoikhoi-Dutch War (1659–1660), where Dutch firearms and alliances with neighboring clans enabled territorial gains, displacing herders and entrenching European land claims.[45] By van Riebeeck's departure in 1662, the settlement numbered around 200 Europeans, focused on self-sufficiency for passing fleets rather than expansive colonization.[44]Dutch Cape Colony and Boer expansions
The Dutch Cape Colony originated as a strategic outpost established by the Dutch East India Company (VOC) on April 6, 1652, when Jan van Riebeeck arrived with approximately 90 settlers and constructed Fort de Goede Hoop at Table Bay to provision ships bound for Asia.[43] The initial settlement focused on cultivating vegetables, grains, and livestock to combat scurvy among crews, with early interactions involving barter with local Khoikhoi pastoralists for cattle and sheep.[46] By 1657, the VOC permitted nine company servants to become free burghers, allocating them farms along the Liesbeek River, which marked the onset of permanent European agriculture and gradual territorial expansion.[47] Labor shortages prompted the importation of slaves starting in 1658, primarily from Madagascar, Mozambique, Indonesia, and India, totaling around 60,000 by the end of the slave trade in 1807 to support intensive farming and viticulture.[48] Conflicts with Khoikhoi intensified over grazing lands and water resources, culminating in the Khoikhoi-Dutch Wars of 1659–1660 and 1673–1677, where Dutch firepower and alliances with other groups led to Khoikhoi defeats, population decline from disease and displacement, and their coerced integration as wage laborers or herders on colonial estates.[46] Trekboers, descendants of Dutch, German, and French Huguenot settlers, adopted a nomadic pastoral lifestyle, pushing eastward beyond initial boundaries by the early 1700s, establishing commando systems for defense and raiding that further marginalized indigenous San hunter-gatherers through extermination campaigns and enslavement.[49] British occupation of the Cape in 1795, made permanent in 1806, exacerbated tensions among Boer frontiersmen over policies like the 1834 abolition of slavery—which affected one-third of the colony's population without sufficient compensation—and perceived bureaucratic interference in land tenure and judicial matters.[48] These grievances fueled the Great Trek, a mass migration beginning in 1835, involving 12,000 to 15,000 Boers in family-based wagon trains (voortrekkers) seeking autonomy north of the Orange and Vaal Rivers amid the destabilizing Mfecane upheavals that had depopulated regions following Zulu expansions.[50] Early treks encountered resistance from Ndebele under Mzilikazi, repelled at Vegkop in 1836, and Zulus under Dingane, who massacred Piet Retief's party of 70 in February 1838 after a land treaty, prompting retaliatory actions.[50] The decisive Battle of Blood River on December 16, 1838, saw 464 Voortrekkers led by Andries Pretorius form a defensive laager of wagons against an estimated 10,000 Zulu impis, resulting in three minor Boer injuries and over 3,000 Zulu deaths due to superior rifles and defensive tactics, securing Natal for settlement.[51] Subsequent dispersions established proto-republics, with the Natal contingent briefly forming a Volksraad in 1839 before British annexation in 1843, while inland groups formalized the Orange Free State in 1854 and the South African Republic (Transvaal) in 1852 through self-governance pacts, later recognized by Britain via the Sand River Convention of 1852 and Bloemfontein Convention of 1854, enabling Boer sovereignty over vast interior territories despite ongoing skirmishes with African polities.[52] These expansions entrenched a pastoral economy reliant on commando militias and tributary relations with subdued chiefdoms, setting the stage for mineral discoveries that drew renewed imperial interest.[53]British conquests, mineral revolutions, and Union formation
British forces occupied the Cape Colony in 1795 to secure the sea route to India amid the French Revolutionary Wars, temporarily displacing Dutch East India Company rule.[54] The colony was restored to Dutch control under the Batavian Republic in 1803 via the Treaty of Amiens, but Britain reoccupied it permanently in January 1806 after defeating Dutch forces at the Battle of Blaauwberg.[54] British administration introduced reforms such as the abolition of slavery in 1834 with limited compensation, English as the official language, and expansionist policies on the eastern frontier, alienating many Dutch-speaking Boer farmers.[54] These grievances fueled the Great Trek, a mass migration of approximately 12,000 to 14,000 Boers from the Cape Colony between 1835 and the early 1840s, seeking autonomy and fertile lands in the interior.[55] Trekboers clashed with indigenous groups, notably the Zulu under Dingane, resulting in events like the massacre of Piet Retief's party in 1838 and the subsequent Battle of Blood River on December 16, 1838, where 464 Voortrekkers defeated 10,000 Zulu warriors.[50] The migrations established independent Boer republics: the Natalia Republic (later annexed by Britain as Natal Colony in 1843), the Orange Free State (recognized in 1854), and the South African Republic (Transvaal, granted full independence in 1852 by the Sand River Convention).[50] The discovery of diamonds in 1867 near the Orange River, starting with the 21.25-carat Eureka Diamond found by 15-year-old Erasmus Jacobs, ignited a rush centered on Kimberley, drawing thousands and prompting British annexation of Griqualand West in 1871.[56] By the 1870s, open-pit mining at Kimberley produced vast quantities, consolidating under figures like Cecil Rhodes, whose De Beers company dominated output.[56] The 1886 discovery of extensive gold reefs on the Witwatersrand by prospector George Harrison near modern Johannesburg triggered an even larger influx, with the reef yielding over 1.5 billion ounces of gold historically and fueling rapid urbanization; Johannesburg's population surged from a few thousand to over 100,000 by 1900.[57] This mineral wealth strained Boer governance in the Transvaal, as "uitlander" immigrants demanded political rights, heightening Anglo-Boer tensions.[57] Economic disparities contributed to the First Anglo-Boer War (December 1880–March 1881), sparked by Transvaal's rebellion against British annexation in 1877; Boers achieved decisive victories, including at Majuba Hill on February 27, 1881, where around 400–500 Boers routed approximately 405 British troops, restoring Transvaal independence via the Pretoria Convention.[58] Gold ambitions escalated conflicts, with events like the failed Jameson Raid on December 29, 1895— a British-backed incursion into Transvaal—leading to the Second Anglo-Boer War (October 11, 1899–May 31, 1902).[59] Britain deployed over 450,000 troops against 60,000 Boers, employing scorched-earth tactics and concentration camps where 28,000 Boer civilians, mostly women and children, died from disease; the war cost Britain £222 million and resulted in the Treaty of Vereeniging, annexing the republics as British colonies.[59] Post-war reconstruction under High Commissioner Alfred Milner emphasized infrastructure and anglicization but faced resistance, paving the way for self-government grants to Transvaal (1906) and Orange River Colony (1907).[60] Negotiations culminated in the National Convention (1908–1909), producing the South Africa Act passed by the British Parliament on September 20, 1909, which formed the Union of South Africa on May 31, 1910, as a dominion uniting the Cape, Natal, Transvaal, and Orange River colonies under a unitary state with a white-dominated parliament.[61] The constitution retained Cape's qualified non-racial franchise but excluded most black Africans nationally, entrenching segregationist policies; Louis Botha became the first prime minister, blending Boer and British interests.[60]Segregation, apartheid policies, and internal resistance
Racial segregation in South Africa predated formal apartheid, with policies like the 1913 Natives Land Act restricting Black South Africans' land ownership to approximately 7% of the territory outside the Cape Province, reserving the majority for white farmers and limiting Black economic independence.[62] These measures, inherited from colonial administrations, enforced residential and occupational separations, pass laws requiring Black workers to carry identification documents for urban access, and unequal educational opportunities, setting the stage for intensified discrimination after Union in 1910.[63] The National Party's victory in the 1948 general election, led by Daniel F. Malan, formalized apartheid as state policy, emphasizing "separate development" to justify racial classification and territorial division into white-controlled areas and Bantustans for non-whites.[64] Malan's government enacted foundational laws, including the Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act in 1949 banning interracial unions, the Immorality Amendment Act in 1950 criminalizing extramarital interracial sex, and the Population Registration Act in 1950 mandating racial categorization of all citizens into White, Black, Coloured, or Indian groups to administer segregation.[65] Subsequent legislation, such as the Group Areas Act of 1950 designating residential zones by race and forcibly relocating over 3.5 million non-whites from white areas by the 1980s, and the Bantu Education Act of 1953 establishing inferior schooling for Blacks to prepare them for manual labor, entrenched economic disparities and cultural isolation.[65] [63] Internal resistance emerged early through organizations like the African National Congress (ANC), founded in 1912 to advocate for Black political rights, initially via petitions and legal challenges against segregation.[66] The 1952 Defiance Campaign, coordinated by the ANC and South African Indian Congress, involved mass civil disobedience against pass laws and curfews, resulting in over 8,000 arrests and galvanizing broader participation, though it failed to repeal key statutes.[67] Tensions escalated with the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) protest on March 21, 1960, in Sharpeville, where approximately 5,000 unarmed demonstrators gathered to surrender passbooks; police opened fire, killing 69 and wounding over 180, mostly in the back, prompting a national state of emergency, the banning of ANC and PAC, and international condemnation.[68] [69] In response, the ANC established Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) in 1961 as its armed wing, conducting sabotage against infrastructure to avoid civilian casualties initially, though later operations included bombings causing deaths and escalating state crackdowns, including the 1964 Rivonia Trial imprisoning Nelson Mandela and other leaders for life.[70] Resistance intensified in the 1970s amid policies like the 1976 mandate for partial Afrikaans instruction in Black schools, sparking the Soweto uprising on June 16, 1976, where students protested, leading to police shootings that killed at least 176, with unrest spreading nationwide and resulting in over 600 deaths by year's end, boosting exile recruitment for ANC and global anti-apartheid mobilization.[71] [72] These events highlighted the causal link between enforced racial hierarchies and violent backlash, as pass laws and educational restrictions fueled urban discontent and economic grievances among a growing Black proletariat.[73]Negotiated transition, 1994 elections, and Mandela era
On February 2, 1990, President F. W. de Klerk announced the unbanning of the African National Congress (ANC), Pan Africanist Congress (PAC), and South African Communist Party, along with the impending release of Nelson Mandela after 27 years in prison, marking the formal start of negotiations to dismantle apartheid.[74] Mandela was released on February 11, 1990, and initial bilateral talks between the National Party (NP) government and the ANC began shortly thereafter, amid ongoing violence from groups like the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) and security forces.[75] The Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA) convened in December 1991, involving multiple parties, but broke down due to disagreements over power-sharing and violence, leading to intensified township conflicts that killed thousands between 1990 and 1994.[10] Negotiations resumed in 1993 under the Multi-Party Negotiating Forum, resulting in an interim constitution on November 18, 1993, that established a Government of National Unity and scheduled multiracial elections, despite assassinations like that of ANC leader Chris Hani in April 1993 which nearly derailed the process.[74] The agreement prioritized avoiding civil war through compromise rather than retribution, with de Klerk and Mandela sharing the Nobel Peace Prize in October 1993 for their roles in facilitating the transition.[75] South Africa's first democratic elections occurred from April 26 to 29, 1994, allowing universal suffrage for citizens over 18, with the ANC securing 62.65% of the vote and 252 of 400 National Assembly seats, falling short of a two-thirds majority needed to unilaterally alter the interim constitution.[76] The NP received 20.4%, and the IFP 10.5%, leading to Mandela's inauguration as president on May 10, 1994, in a ceremony attended by global leaders.[74] Voter turnout exceeded 85%, though logistical issues and IFP boycotts in KwaZulu-Natal affected some regions.[77] Mandela's presidency from 1994 to 1999 emphasized racial reconciliation to prevent societal collapse, forming a unity government including NP and IFP members, and establishing the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) in 1995 under Archbishop Desmond Tutu to address apartheid-era atrocities through truth-telling rather than prosecutions.[77] The TRC received approximately 21,000 statements from victims, with around 2,000 testifying in public hearings, held over 2,500 amnesty hearings, and granted amnesty to 849 of 7,112 applicants who fully disclosed politically motivated crimes, though critics argued it insufficiently held perpetrators accountable and failed to deliver comprehensive reparations.[78][79] Economically, Mandela's administration shifted from initial Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) social spending to the 1996 Growth, Employment and Redistribution (GEAR) strategy, which promoted fiscal discipline, privatization of state assets, trade liberalization, and exchange control relaxation to attract investment and stabilize the economy amid inherited debt and inequality.[77] GDP growth averaged around 3% annually, but unemployment rose and wealth disparities persisted, with limited land reform as reconciliation took precedence over radical redistribution.[80] Mandela's focus on unity fostered international reintegration, including rejoining the Commonwealth in 1994, but domestic challenges like rising crime highlighted the limits of symbolic gestures without deeper structural changes.[81]ANC dominance, Zuma corruption scandals, and Ramaphosa reforms
The African National Congress (ANC) maintained electoral dominance in South Africa following the 1994 transition, securing victories in every national election through 2019 with vote shares ranging from 57.5% in 2019 to a peak of 69.7% in 2004, enabling control of the presidency, National Assembly majority, and all provincial governments until the 2020s.[82] This hegemony stemmed from the party's historical role in opposing apartheid, its broad appeal among black voters, and institutional advantages like incumbency and patronage networks, though critics attribute it to suppressed opposition and electoral irregularities in some locales.[83] Under Thabo Mbeki's presidency (1999–2008), the ANC pursued neoliberal policies like the Growth, Employment and Redistribution (GEAR) strategy, which prioritized fiscal discipline and debt repayment but yielded modest GDP growth averaging 4.2% annually while failing to curb unemployment exceeding 20%.[84] Jacob Zuma's ascent to the presidency in 2009, after ousting Mbeki via internal party maneuvers, marked a shift toward populist rhetoric and intensified corruption allegations that eroded ANC credibility. Zuma faced over 700 charges of corruption, fraud, and racketeering tied to a 1999 arms procurement deal worth R30 billion, involving kickbacks from companies like Thales; charges were controversially dropped before his 2009 election but reinstated by the Supreme Court of Appeals in 2017.[85] The Nkandla scandal involved unauthorized upgrades to Zuma's KwaZulu-Natal homestead using R246 million in public funds for non-security features like a cattle kraal and swimming pool, ruled unconstitutional by the Constitutional Court in 2016, ordering Zuma to repay a portion.[85] Most prominently, the Gupta family—Indian-born businessmen close to Zuma—allegedly orchestrated "state capture" by influencing cabinet appointments, such as the 2015 dismissal of Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene, and securing lucrative state contracts through entities like Eskom and Transnet, with leaked emails revealing offers of ministerial posts.[86] The Zondo Commission of Inquiry (2018–2022) documented systemic graft during Zuma's tenure, estimating losses in the hundreds of billions of rands and implicating networks that hollowed out state-owned enterprises, contributing to service delivery failures like rolling blackouts.[87] Zuma denied wrongdoing, framing probes as politically motivated "white monopoly capital" conspiracies, but his 2021 imprisonment for 15 months on contempt charges for defying the commission highlighted accountability gaps in ANC leadership.[88] Cyril Ramaphosa's election as ANC president in December 2017, following a no-confidence vote against Zuma, ushered in promises of renewal amid party factionalism. Ramaphosa prioritized anti-corruption, establishing the Zondo Commission and the National Anti-Corruption Advisory Council in 2022 to coordinate prosecutions and policy, leading to arrests of figures like former ministers and Gupta associates, though implementation has been uneven with conviction rates lagging. Economically, initiatives like Operation Vulindlela targeted structural bottlenecks in energy, transport, and digital infrastructure, yielding partial successes such as private sector involvement in Eskom's generation capacity, which reduced load-shedding frequency by 2023 after peaking at over 300 days in 2022.[89] However, reforms faced resistance from ANC allies like unions and radicals, perpetuating high unemployment at 32.9% in 2023 and GDP growth below 1% amid regulatory hurdles and fiscal constraints from debt servicing absorbing 20% of the budget.[90] Ramaphosa's "new dawn" narrative emphasized inclusive growth and anti-corruption as causal levers for recovery, yet persistent scandals, including undeclared cash at his Phala Phala farm in 2020, underscored incomplete institutional cleanup and the ANC's entrenched patronage culture.[91] These efforts mitigated some Zuma-era damage but failed to reverse voter disillusionment, as evidenced by the ANC's vote share of 62.15% in 2014 before first dipping below 60% to 57.50% in 2019.[92][93]2024 elections, coalition government, and recent challenges
The 2024 South African general election, held on 29 May, marked a pivotal shift as the African National Congress (ANC) secured 40.18% of the national vote, translating to 159 seats in the 400-member National Assembly, falling short of the majority it had held since 1994.[94] Voter turnout stood at 58.64%, with the Democratic Alliance (DA) obtaining 21.81% (87 seats), the uMkhonto weSizwe Party (MK) 14.58% (58 seats), and the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) 9.52% (39 seats).[94] This outcome reflected widespread voter dissatisfaction with the ANC's three-decade governance, attributed to persistent economic stagnation, corruption scandals, and service delivery failures, including chronic electricity shortages.[95] The Independent Electoral Commission certified the results on 2 June, prompting negotiations for a coalition arrangement.[96] In response, President Cyril Ramaphosa announced the formation of a Government of National Unity (GNU) on 14 June, encompassing the ANC alongside the DA, Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP), Patriotic Alliance (PA), and six other parties that collectively held over 70% of parliamentary seats.[97] The GNU's statement of intent emphasized consensus-building on key policy areas while excluding parties like the EFF and MK, which advocated expropriation without compensation and were seen as incompatible with market-oriented reforms.[98] Ramaphosa was re-elected president by the National Assembly on the same day, securing 283 votes against opposition nominee Julius Malema's 44.[99] The cabinet, sworn in on 30 June and expanded in subsequent adjustments, allocated key portfolios to coalition partners, including DA leader John Steenhuisen as Minister of Agriculture, Thembi Simelane (ANC) as Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development from 3 July 2024 to 3 December 2024,[100] followed by Mmamoloko Kubayi (ANC),[101] and John Jeffery of the ANC as Deputy Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development, aiming to stabilize governance through power-sharing.[102] By October 2025, the GNU faced mounting challenges amid ideological tensions and structural economic woes. Electricity supply disruptions, known as load shedding, resumed in January 2025 at Stage 3 levels after a near-year suspension, stemming from Eskom's aging infrastructure, maintenance delays, and insufficient generation capacity, which curtailed industrial output and deterred investment.[8] Economic growth remained sluggish at under 1% annually, exacerbated by unemployment exceeding 32%, fiscal deficits, and a budget impasse in April 2025 that highlighted coalition rifts over spending priorities and debt sustainability.[103] Crime rates persisted at high levels, with over 27,000 murders reported in 2024 alone, undermining public safety and investor confidence, while deteriorating water infrastructure and corruption legacies compounded service delivery strains.[104] Despite some progress in GNU coordination, such as initial reforms in energy procurement, critics noted that entrenched ANC patronage networks and policy gridlock risked perpetuating the inefficiencies that precipitated the electoral rebuke.[105]Geography
Physical features and regional divisions
South Africa occupies the southern tip of the African continent at approximately 29°00′S, 24°00′E, spanning a land area of 1,214,470 square kilometers bordered by Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Eswatini, Lesotho, the Atlantic Ocean, and the Indian Ocean.[1] The country's terrain consists of a vast interior plateau with a mean elevation of 1,034 meters, rimmed by the Great Escarpment—a semicircular barrier of rugged hills and mountains paralleling the coastline—and flanked by a narrow coastal plain.[1][106] The highest elevation is Ntheledi (Mafadi) at 3,450 meters in the Drakensberg Mountains, part of the eastern escarpment, while the lowest points lie at sea level along the oceans.[1] Physiographic regions include the Highveld, a central-eastern grassland plateau at 1,200 to 1,800 meters supporting agriculture and mining; the semi-arid Karoo basins in the southwest and south, featuring ancient folded rocks and sparse vegetation; the northern Bushveld with its undulating savannas rich in mineral deposits; and the subtropical Lowveld east of the escarpment, descending to lower elevations with denser bush and riverine systems.[107][106][108] The southwestern Cape Fold Mountains add dissected ridges and valleys, influencing local climates and biodiversity.[109] Major rivers shape the hydrology: the Orange River drains westward for 2,092 kilometers into the Atlantic, forming the border with Namibia, while the Limpopo River flows eastward for 1,800 kilometers to the Indian Ocean, delineating northern boundaries.[1] The Vaal River, a tributary of the Orange, extends 1,210 kilometers through the interior plateau.[1] Administrative regional divisions consist of nine provinces, each reflecting diverse physical characteristics: the Northern Cape encompasses vast arid expanses of the Kalahari Desert and Karoo; the Western Cape features the Cape Fold Mountains, coastal plains, and Mediterranean-like terrain; the Eastern Cape includes rugged escarpment edges and subtropical coasts; the Free State occupies Highveld grasslands; Gauteng centers on the densely urbanized Witwatersrand ridge within the Highveld; KwaZulu-Natal borders the Indian Ocean with Drakensberg foothills and coastal lowlands; Mpumalanga and Limpopo span escarpment lowlands, Bushveld, and Lowveld savannas; and North West covers transitional Highveld-Bushveld plateaus.[1][110] These divisions facilitate governance over terrains ranging from desert to montane, with the escarpment often marking provincial boundaries in the east.[109]Climate patterns and environmental risks
South Africa's climate is characterized by significant regional diversity, shaped by its position between 22°S and 35°S latitude, the influence of the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, and the elevated interior plateau averaging 1,000–2,000 meters above sea level. The western Cape experiences a Mediterranean climate with cool, wet winters (May–August) and warm, dry summers, receiving 500–1,000 mm of annual precipitation concentrated in winter due to frontal systems from the Atlantic.[111] In contrast, the eastern seaboard and northeastern interior feature subtropical climates with hot, humid summers and mild winters, where rainfall—typically 600–1,200 mm annually—occurs predominantly in summer, driven by tropical easterly flows and thunderstorms. Central and northwestern regions, including the Karoo and Kalahari fringes, are semi-arid to arid, with annual rainfall below 400 mm, high evaporation rates exceeding precipitation, and temperatures often surpassing 40°C in summer.[112] This patchwork results in 13 Köppen-Geiger climate subtypes, ranging from temperate oceanic (Cfb) in highland areas to hot desert (BWh) in the northwest, contributing to overall warm temperate conditions moderated by altitude.[113] Climate variability is pronounced, with interannual fluctuations linked to phenomena like El Niño-Southern Oscillation, leading to alternating droughts and floods. Historical data indicate average national temperatures of 17–18°C, but extremes range from sub-zero in winter highlands to over 45°C in desert interiors. Precipitation exhibits high spatial and temporal unevenness, with the winter-rainfall zone receiving reliable but low volumes, while summer-rainfall areas face convective storms prone to hail and lightning.[114] Environmental risks stem from this variability compounded by water scarcity in a semi-arid nation where only 13% of land receives over 750 mm of rain annually, supporting 80% of the population and agriculture. Droughts pose chronic threats, as seen in the 2015–2018 event that reduced Cape Town's reservoirs to 10–20% capacity, nearly triggering "Day Zero" water rationing for its 4 million residents, and caused crop failures costing R10–15 billion in damages.[115] Floods, conversely, devastate eastern provinces; the April 2022 KwaZulu-Natal event, with over 450 mm of rain in days, killed 459 people, displaced 40,000, and inflicted R17 billion in infrastructure losses, exacerbated by inadequate drainage and informal settlements on floodplains.[116] Other hazards include veldfires in the fire-prone fynbos and grassland biomes, which burned 12 million hectares in 2019–2020, and soil erosion in overgrazed arid zones, accelerating desertification across 65% of the land.[117] Climate change projections indicate amplified risks, with temperatures rising 1.5–2°C above pre-industrial levels by mid-century under moderate emissions scenarios, twice the global average rate, intensifying heatwaves that already exceed 35°C for 20–30 days annually in many areas. Rainfall patterns are shifting toward greater variability: drier winters in the southwest, more intense but erratic summer downpours in the east, and overall reduced reliability, heightening drought frequency and severity, potentially halving maize yields by 2050 in rain-fed regions. Sea-level rise of 0.1–0.5 meters by 2100 threatens coastal erosion and salinization, while increased cyclone intensity from the Indian Ocean endangers ports like Durban. These trends, driven by greenhouse gas accumulation, interact with non-climatic factors such as population growth and poor land management to elevate vulnerability, particularly in water-stressed basins supplying 60% of GDP-generating economic activity.[118][119][120]Biodiversity hotspots and conservation efforts
South Africa contains three of the world's 35 biodiversity hotspots, defined by exceptional species richness and endemism under at least 30% threat from habitat loss: the Cape Floristic Region, Succulent Karoo, and Maputaland-Pondoland-Albany.[121] [122] These hotspots collectively harbor a significant portion of the country's estimated 95,000 known species, with flora endemism exceeding 60% in key areas, driven by unique geological, climatic, and evolutionary factors such as Mediterranean-type climates and topographic diversity.[123] The Cape Floristic Region (CFR), spanning roughly 90,000 km² in the southwestern corner, exemplifies this with over 9,000 vascular plant species—representing the highest non-tropical concentration globally—of which approximately 69% are endemic and 1,736 are threatened.[124] [125] The Succulent Karoo, an arid transition zone northward, supports around 6,000 plant species, over 40% endemic succulents adapted to low-rainfall conditions, while the Maputaland-Pondoland-Albany hotspot along the eastern seaboard features coastal forests, grasslands, and wetlands with high vertebrate diversity, including endemic birds and reptiles.[121] [126] Conservation efforts are coordinated through the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE) via the National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan (NBSAP), aiming to maintain ecosystem integrity while addressing threats like habitat fragmentation from agriculture and urbanization, which have degraded up to 40% of natural vegetation in some hotspots.[127] South African National Parks (SANParks) manages 20 national parks covering about 4 million hectares, or 6.5% of land area, including key reserves like Table Mountain National Park in the CFR (protecting fynbos ecosystems) and Kruger National Park, which safeguards savanna biodiversity with 147 mammal species, 507 birds, and the "Big Five" megafauna.[128] [129] Initiatives emphasize habitat restoration, invasive species control, and anti-poaching operations, with SANParks reporting over 1,000 rhino poaching incidents annually in the early 2020s but declining trends due to enhanced ranger patrols and aerial surveillance.[128] Transfrontier conservation areas, such as the Greater Limpopo linking Kruger with Mozambique and Zimbabwe parks, facilitate wildlife migration and genetic diversity across 35,000 km².[130] Private and community-based models complement state efforts, with over 500 private game reserves contributing to biodiversity stewardship and economic incentives like ecotourism, which generated R46 billion in 2019.[131] In May 2025, DFFE launched biodiversity offset tools, including the SANParks Proactive Biodiversity Offset Scheme, to accelerate protected area expansion by monetizing offsets for development impacts, aligning with the global target of 30% terrestrial protection by 2030 under the Kunming-Montreal Framework.[132] Effectiveness varies; while protected areas represent 9% of land, empirical assessments indicate uneven coverage of threatened species, with only 19% of landscapes under formal protection continent-wide, underscoring needs for adaptive management amid climate-induced shifts like fynbos contraction.[133] [134]Demographics
Population size, growth, and migration trends
South Africa's population reached 62,027,503 according to the 2022 census conducted by Statistics South Africa, marking an increase from 51,770,560 in the 2011 census.[135] Mid-year estimates for 2024 placed the figure at approximately 63,015,904, reflecting an annual growth of 835,513 people or 1.33% from 2023.[136] Projections indicate a mid-2025 population of around 63.1 million, continuing a pattern of moderate expansion driven primarily by net immigration amid declining natural increase.[137] Historical growth rates have decelerated from highs above 2% in the early 2000s, averaging 1.28% annually between 2011 and 2022, influenced by falling fertility rates—now below replacement level at about 2.3 children per woman—and elevated mortality from HIV/AIDS, though antiretroviral programs have mitigated some losses. The youth bulge persists, with those under 15 comprising roughly 28% of the population in 2024, but aging cohorts are emerging as life expectancy rebounds to 64.1 years for males and 68.5 for females.[137] Official estimates face scrutiny for potential inaccuracies, including undercounts in the 2022 census estimated at up to 20% in some analyses, though Statistics South Africa maintains the data's utility for planning.[138] Migration trends feature significant outflows of South African citizens, particularly skilled professionals and white South Africans, with over 500,000 of the latter group emigrating between 2000 and 2025, reducing their demographic share to 7.1%.[139] Popular destinations include Australia, the United Kingdom, and Canada, driven by economic stagnation, crime, and policy uncertainties.[140] This brain drain offsets partial gains in human capital, as emigrants often hold tertiary qualifications. Conversely, immigration from neighboring African states—predominantly Zimbabwe, Mozambique, and Nigeria—has surged, contributing to positive net migration of 166,972 in 2024, down from higher prior years but sustaining overall population growth.[141] Undocumented inflows, estimated in the hundreds of thousands annually, bolster labor markets in sectors like mining and agriculture but strain urban infrastructure.[142] Internal migration patterns favor urbanization, with Gauteng province projected to gain 1.42 million residents between 2021 and 2026, followed by the Western Cape at 500,000, fueled by job opportunities in Johannesburg and Cape Town.[137] Rural depopulation in provinces like Eastern Cape and Limpopo accelerates, exacerbating regional disparities in service delivery. Net migration rates remain modestly positive at around 0.2-0.3 per 1,000 population in recent estimates, underscoring immigration's role in countering domestic outflows.[141]| Year | Population (millions) | Annual Growth Rate (%) | Net Migration (thousands) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 59.9 | 1.62 | ~200 |
| 2021 | 60.8 | 1.54 | ~230 |
| 2022 | 62.0 | ~1.3 | ~233 |
| 2023 | 62.2 | 1.33 | 228 |
| 2024 | 63.0 | 1.33 | 167 |
Ethnic groups, languages, and cultural identities
South Africa's population, enumerated at 62 million in the 2022 census, comprises distinct ethnic groups shaped by historical migrations, colonial settlements, and internal mixing, with Black Africans forming the majority at 81.4%, followed by Coloureds at 8.2%, Whites at 7.3%, Indians/Asians at 2.7%, and others at 0.4%.[145][135] Black Africans encompass Bantu-speaking peoples such as Zulu (approximately 24% of the total population, concentrated in KwaZulu-Natal), Xhosa (16%, mainly in the Eastern Cape), Pedi/Northern Sotho (10%), Tswana (8%), and smaller groups like Tsonga, Swati, Venda, and Ndebele, whose identities trace to pre-colonial kingdoms and migrations from central Africa between the 4th and 17th centuries.[145][146] Whites primarily consist of Afrikaners (descendants of 17th-18th century Dutch, German, and French Huguenot settlers, about 60% of Whites) and English-speakers (from 19th-century British immigration), with cultural distinctions persisting in language use and historical narratives like the Great Trek.[146] Coloureds, a heterogeneous group of mixed Khoisan, Bantu, European, and Asian ancestry often linked to Cape slavery and intermarriage from the 17th century, predominate in the Western Cape and Northern Cape.[146] Indian/Asian South Africans, numbering around 1.6 million, largely descend from 19th-century indentured laborers from southern India and traders from Gujarat, maintaining communities in KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng.[145]| Ethnic Group | Percentage of Population (2022) | Approximate Number (millions) |
|---|---|---|
| Black African | 81.4% | 50.5 |
| Coloured | 8.2% | 5.1 |
| White | 7.3% | 4.5 |
| Indian/Asian | 2.7% | 1.7 |
| Other/Unspecified | 0.4% | 0.2 |
Religious composition and secular trends
According to the 2022 national census conducted by Statistics South Africa, 84.5% of the population identifies as Christian, encompassing a range of denominations including Protestant, Catholic, and independent African-initiated churches.[147] This figure reflects Christianity's longstanding dominance, introduced through European colonization and missionary activities since the 17th century, and further entrenched during apartheid when it aligned with state ideologies for certain groups. Among black Africans, coloureds, and whites, affiliation exceeds 85%, while it is lower among Indian/Asian populations at around 47%.[147]| Religion/Faith Group | Percentage (2022 Census) |
|---|---|
| Christianity | 84.5% |
| Traditional African religions | ~7-8% (syncretized with Christianity for many) |
| No religion/atheism | 2.9% |
| Islam | 1.6% |
| Hinduism | 1.1% |
| Other (including Judaism, Buddhism) | ~1-2% |
Education attainment and systemic challenges
South Africa's adult literacy rate stood at 95% as of recent estimates, positioning it as the second-highest in Africa, though functional illiteracy affects approximately 10.2% of adults aged 15 and over, totaling around 3.9 million individuals in 2022, with higher rates among women (10.5%) compared to men (9.8%). Secondary education completion has increased significantly, with the proportion of individuals attaining at least secondary-level qualifications rising from 9.4% in 1996 to 34.7% in 2022, and 55% of adults reporting secondary school as their highest attainment level in surveys from 2025. The National Senior Certificate (matric) pass rate reached a record 87.3% for the class of 2024, up from 82.9% in 2023, with 874,029 candidates writing the exams. However, this figure masks substantial attrition, as only about 50% of the original cohort starting Grade 1 completes matric with a passing grade when accounting for dropouts over the 12-year cycle. Tertiary attainment remains low, with just 1% of 25-34-year-olds holding a master's degree or equivalent in 2025, far below the OECD average of 16%. International assessments underscore deficiencies in learning outcomes despite these attainment metrics. South Africa has not participated in the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) since 2015, when it scored 372 in mathematics, 376 in reading, and 358 in science—well below the OECD averages of around 490—placing it among the lowest performers globally. Domestic evaluations reveal similar gaps, with only 32% of employed youth aged 15-35 holding qualifications beyond Grade 11 in 2024, contributing to persistent youth unemployment exceeding 40%. Systemic challenges exacerbate these issues, rooted in inefficient resource allocation and governance failures. South Africa allocates over 20% of its national budget to education—among the highest globally—yet yields poor returns due to corruption in procurement, irregular appointments, and cadre deployment prioritizing political loyalty over competence, which has eroded institutional integrity. Infrastructure decay affects thousands of schools, with many lacking basic facilities like libraries (present in only 3 out of 10 schools), sanitation, or electricity, particularly in rural and township areas, hindering effective teaching. Teacher absenteeism, union resistance to performance-based reforms via organizations like SADTU, and overcrowded classrooms compound low instructional quality, as evidenced by widespread underperformance in core subjects like mathematics and science, where matric passers in these fields declined sharply in 2024. Socio-economic factors, including poverty and inequality inherited from apartheid but perpetuated by policy shortcomings, further entrench divides, with public schools serving predominantly black students faring worse than fee-paying or former Model C institutions. These challenges reflect causal failures in accountability and incentives rather than mere resource scarcity, as high per-pupil spending (USD 3,108 annually from primary to secondary levels) fails to translate into proficiency.Health metrics, disease burdens, and public systems
South Africa's life expectancy at birth stood at approximately 66.5 years in 2024, with males averaging 63.6 years and females 69.2 years, reflecting gradual recovery from HIV/AIDS impacts but remaining below global averages due to persistent communicable and non-communicable diseases.[154] [155] Infant mortality rate was estimated at 21.9 to 23.1 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2024, while the maternal mortality ratio reached 111.7 per 100,000 live births in 2023, indicating ongoing challenges in perinatal care amid resource constraints.[156] [157] [158] The disease burden remains dominated by infectious diseases intertwined with rising non-communicable conditions. HIV prevalence among adults aged 15-49 was 17.1% in 2023, affecting about 8 million people, with 150,000 new infections annually despite antiretroviral therapy scale-up; this equates to South Africa bearing nearly one-fifth of global HIV cases, driven by factors including unprotected sex and mother-to-child transmission.[159] [160] [161] Tuberculosis incidence, often co-occurring with HIV, affected around 280,000 people in 2022, with South Africa achieving a 50% reduction since 2015 but still ranking among the world's highest-burden countries at roughly 450 cases per 100,000 population.[162] [163] Leading causes of death in 2022 included HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, interpersonal violence, diabetes, and ischemic heart disease, with communicable diseases accounting for a disproportionate share relative to income level, exacerbated by undernutrition, household air pollution, and behavioral risks.[164] [165] Non-communicable diseases like cardiovascular conditions and cancers are rising, contributing to a dual burden that strains diagnostics and treatment capacity.[166] The public health system, constitutionally mandated to provide access to all, operates through provincial departments and serves about 84% of the population via tax-funded facilities, while a parallel private sector caters to the insured minority with superior outcomes but high costs.[167] Facilities face chronic understaffing, with doctor-to-patient ratios far below WHO recommendations (0.7 per 1,000 versus 2.5 needed), brain drain to private practice or abroad, equipment shortages, and infrastructure decay, leading to long wait times and preventable deaths.[168] [169] Corruption, mismanagement, and maladministration—evident in procurement scandals and uncompetitive salaries—further erode efficiency, with public spending per capita lagging despite comprising 48% of total health expenditure.[167] [170] The National Health Insurance (NHI) Act, signed in May 2024, aims for universal coverage via a centralized fund to purchase services, but implementation stalled by October 2025 amid funding shortfalls, legal challenges from opposition parties and medical associations, and fiscal constraints under the post-election coalition government.[171] [172] [173] Critics argue the NHI overlooks governance failures, potentially crowding out private innovation without addressing root causes like cadre deployment in health leadership, which has correlated with declining service quality since 1994.[174] [175] Rural and underserved areas bear the brunt, with climate-related disruptions compounding vulnerabilities in facilities already hampered by power outages and supply chain breakdowns.[176]Government and Politics
Constitutional framework and institutions
The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, constitutes the supreme law, overriding any inconsistent law and binding all state organs, including the executive, legislature, and judiciary. It was adopted by the Constitutional Assembly on 8 May 1996, certified by the Constitutional Court on 18 November 1996 after amendments, signed into law by President Nelson Mandela on 10 December 1996, and entered into force on 4 February 1997, replacing the 1993 Interim Constitution.[177] [178] The document establishes constitutional supremacy, sovereignty residing with the people, and a foundational Bill of Rights in Chapter 2, which entrenches civil, political, socioeconomic, and group rights, subject to limitations only if reasonable and justifiable in an open and democratic society. South Africa operates as a unitary parliamentary republic, with government structured into three interdependent spheres—national, provincial, and local—each possessing legislative and executive authority over matters assigned by Schedules 4 and 5 of the Constitution, alongside concurrent national powers under Schedule 4.[179] National supremacy prevails in conflicts, but provinces hold exclusive legislative competence in areas like provincial planning, liquor licenses, and roads, while sharing others such as education and health with the national sphere; local government manages municipalities for basic services like water and electricity. This devolution aims to enable cooperative governance, though national legislation can override provincial laws on concurrent matters to ensure uniformity. The executive authority vests in the President, who serves as head of state and government, elected by the National Assembly from among its members for a five-year term renewable once, and appoints a Deputy President and Cabinet ministers accountable to Parliament.[180] The President assents to bills, commands the defense force, and conducts foreign affairs, but exercises powers subject to constitutional constraints and judicial review. Legislative power resides in Parliament, a bicameral body comprising the National Assembly (400 members elected via proportional representation every five years) and the National Council of Provinces (NCOP, with 90 delegates representing provinces to safeguard regional interests).[181] The National Assembly passes national laws, scrutinizes the executive through committees, and initiates money bills; the NCOP participates in provincial matters affecting legislation, requiring provincial mandates for votes.[182] Provincial legislatures, unicameral with member numbers varying by population (from 30 to 80 seats), enact provincial laws and oversee executive premiers and councils. The judiciary maintains independence, with the Constitutional Court as apex authority on constitutional matters, comprising 11 judges appointed by the President on recommendation of the Judicial Service Commission, holding office until age 70.[183] Below it sit the Supreme Court of Appeal for non-constitutional appeals, High Courts with original jurisdiction, and specialized courts like the Labour Court; all courts interpret the Constitution progressively to promote values of human dignity, equality, and freedom. Chapter 9 establishes independent state institutions supporting constitutional democracy, including the Public Protector (investigating improper conduct in public administration), South African Human Rights Commission (promoting and protecting rights), Commission for Gender Equality, Auditor-General (auditing public accounts), Reserve Bank (maintaining price stability), and Independent Electoral Commission (managing free and fair elections).[184] These bodies, funded by Parliament and protected from interference, report annually to enhance accountability, though their effectiveness depends on enforcement mechanisms like court referrals.[185]Political parties, electoral system, and power dynamics
South Africa's electoral system for national and provincial legislatures uses closed-list proportional representation, whereby voters select parties rather than individual candidates, and seats in the 400-member National Assembly are allocated proportionally based on national vote shares, with 200 seats from a national ballot and 200 compensatory seats from provincial ballots.[186] National elections occur every five years, with eligibility extended to all citizens aged 18 or older, including those abroad since 2014; voter turnout in the 2024 general election was 58.64%.[187][94] This system, designed post-apartheid to ensure broad representation, has facilitated multi-party contests but reinforced party-centric politics by limiting direct accountability to voters.[188] The major political parties include the African National Congress (ANC), which held 159 seats (40.18% of the national vote) after the May 29, 2024, election; the Democratic Alliance (DA) with 87 seats (21.81%); uMkhonto weSizwe (MK Party) with 58 seats (14.58%); the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) with 39 seats (9.52%); and the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) with 17 seats (3.84%).[94] Smaller parties such as the Patriotic Alliance (PA) and Freedom Front Plus (FF+) hold 9 and 6 seats, respectively, while over 50 parties contested but many failed to secure representation.[189] The ANC, historically rooted in anti-apartheid liberation, maintains a broad base among black South Africans but has faced internal factionalism; the DA, emphasizing market-oriented reforms and anti-corruption, draws support primarily from white, coloured, and urban voters; the EFF advocates radical economic redistribution including land expropriation without compensation; MK, launched by former president Jacob Zuma, surged on ethnic Zulu appeals and ANC disillusionment; and the IFP represents conservative Zulu interests.[190] Power dynamics have shifted markedly since 1994, when the ANC secured a two-thirds majority enabling constitutional dominance, but persistent governance failures—including economic stagnation, power outages, and corruption scandals—eroded its support, culminating in the 2024 loss of an outright majority.[191] This prompted the ANC to form a Government of National Unity (GNU) coalition with the DA, IFP, and nine smaller parties, granting the DA key portfolios like agriculture and home affairs while the ANC retained presidency under Cyril Ramaphosa; the arrangement, formalized in June 2024, requires consensus on major policies but risks instability from ideological clashes, such as the DA's opposition to EFF-style expropriation demands.[97][192] Opposition fragmentation, evidenced by MK's rapid rise displacing the EFF as the third force, underscores ethnic and populist undercurrents challenging the ANC's patronage networks, though coalition arithmetic favors the center against radical alternatives.[193][194] Provincial legislatures reflect similar tensions, with the ANC losing control in KwaZulu-Natal to an IFP-MK-DA pact and retaining narrow majorities elsewhere via alliances.[96]Governance failures, corruption, and state capture
Since the end of apartheid in 1994, South Africa's governance has been dominated by the African National Congress (ANC), which has held uninterrupted national power, leading to reduced institutional checks and entrenched patronage networks that facilitated corruption.[195] The country's Corruption Perceptions Index score declined from 56 in 1995 to 41 in 2024, ranking it 82nd out of 180 nations, below the global average of 43, reflecting perceptions of entrenched public sector graft.[196] [197] This deterioration stems from weak enforcement of anti-corruption laws, cadre deployment practices prioritizing loyalty over competence, and fiscal leakages estimated to waste billions annually in public procurement and state-owned enterprises (SOEs).[198] State capture, defined as the systematic capture of state institutions by private interests for personal gain, peaked during Jacob Zuma's presidency from 2009 to 2018, as detailed in the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into State Capture (Zondo Commission).[199] The commission's reports, released between 2022 and 2023, confirmed capture occurred on an "extensive scale," involving the Gupta family's influence over cabinet appointments, SOE boards, and contracts worth billions, including rigged tenders at Transnet for locomotives (R54 billion deal in 2015) and Eskom for coal supply (Kusile power station overruns).[200] [201] Zuma's administration enabled this through interference in procurement processes, with evidence showing plans to capture Transnet within a month of his 2009 inauguration.[195] Key enablers included compliant executives like Brian Molefe at Eskom and Lucky Montana at Transnet, who facilitated undue awards, eroding merit-based governance.[202] Preceding state capture, earlier ANC-linked scandals underscored systemic vulnerabilities, such as the 1999 Arms Deal involving R30 billion in procurement irregularities, with allegations of bribes to officials including Zuma, who faced charges in 2005 (later dropped in 2009).[203] The 2005 Travelgate scandal saw 40 ANC MPs charged with fraud for abusing parliamentary travel vouchers, recovering only partial funds.[204] Under Zuma, the Nkandla homestead upgrades (2012–2014) cost R246 million in public funds for non-security features like a cattle kraal, ruled unconstitutional by the Constitutional Court in 2016.[203] These incidents highlight a pattern where political interference supplanted accountability, with the ANC's internal tolerance—evident in Zuma's repeated reelections despite probes—exacerbating failures. Governance breakdowns in SOEs exemplify the fallout, with Eskom's debt ballooning to over R400 billion by 2023 amid corruption-fueled mismanagement, resulting in chronic load-shedding that shaved 4–5% off annual GDP growth since 2008.[205] [206] Similar woes afflicted Transnet, where state capture delayed rail reforms, costing R100 billion in lost freight revenue by 2022, and South African Airways, which accumulated R50 billion in bailouts due to politicized leadership.[207] Economically, corruption diverts funds from infrastructure and services, with KPMG estimating irregular expenditures exceeding R1 trillion since 2014, undermining investor confidence and perpetuating inequality.[208] [209] Under Cyril Ramaphosa's presidency since 2018, anti-corruption rhetoric intensified, but implementation lags: by mid-2025, only partial Zondo recommendations were actioned, with ongoing prosecutions stalled and SOE recoveries slow.[210] Persistent cadre deployment and factional ANC dynamics continue to hinder reforms, as seen in 2021 riots linked to Zuma's arrest, which exposed underlying state fragility.[198] True remediation requires depoliticizing appointments and enforcing accountability, absent which governance erosion risks further economic stagnation.[211]Foreign policy stances and international alignments
South Africa's foreign policy is anchored in principles of multilateralism, non-alignment, and the advancement of South-South cooperation, emphasizing human rights, peace, stability, and economic partnerships as outlined in official statements from the Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO).[212] Under President Cyril Ramaphosa, who assumed office in 2018, the policy maintains continuity from post-apartheid eras, prioritizing African unity through the African Union (AU) and Southern African Development Community (SADC), while engaging global forums like the G20—where South Africa holds the presidency in 2025 under the theme of solidarity, equality, and sustainability.[213] [214] This approach reflects an "active non-alignment," not mere neutrality but a proactive pursuit of interests aligned with the Global South, often diverging from Western consensus on geopolitical conflicts.[215] Regionally, South Africa positions itself as a leader in continental integration, contributing to AU initiatives on peacekeeping and economic development, and coordinating SADC responses to regional crises such as instability in Mozambique and Zimbabwe.[216] Its foreign policy prioritizes peaceful resolution of disputes among neighbors, informed by domestic vulnerabilities to cross-border threats like migration and illicit trade.[217] Globally, membership in BRICS—joined in 2010 and expanded in 2024 to include Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates—underscores alignments with Brazil, Russia, India, China, and newer partners, focusing on alternative financial mechanisms to counter Western-dominated institutions like the IMF.[218] South Africa hosted the 2023 BRICS summit in Johannesburg, inviting Russian President Vladimir Putin despite an International Criminal Court warrant, though he attended virtually; this reflects enduring ANC ties to Russia from Cold War-era support against apartheid.[219] On major conflicts, South Africa has adopted positions emphasizing dialogue over condemnation, abstaining from United Nations votes explicitly denouncing Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine and hosting Russian delegations for military exercises in 2023, framing its stance as rooted in historical solidarity rather than endorsement of aggression.[220] [221] In contrast, it initiated genocide proceedings against Israel at the International Court of Justice on December 29, 2023, alleging violations of the 1948 Genocide Convention in Gaza operations, a move aligned with longstanding ANC support for Palestinian self-determination and drawing domestic political unity despite international backlash.[222] These stances have strained relations with the United States and European Union, prompting U.S. reviews of aid and trade preferences in 2024 over perceived alignment with authoritarian regimes, while deepening economic ties with China—South Africa's largest trading partner—and Russia through BRICS mechanisms.[223] Ramaphosa's administration asserts fidelity to the UN Charter and multilateral reform, yet critics highlight inconsistencies, such as selective human rights advocacy that privileges anti-Western narratives over empirical scrutiny of partner states' actions.[224] [225] Following the 2024 elections and formation of a Government of National Unity, foreign policy under Minister Ronald Lamola emphasizes pragmatism, balancing ideological commitments with economic imperatives like attracting investment amid domestic challenges, though core alignments with BRICS and the AU persist.[223] South Africa's G20 role in 2025 amplifies calls for inclusive global governance, advocating debt relief for developing nations and climate finance, positioning it as a bridge between North and South despite asymmetries in power among BRICS members.[226] This framework sustains a policy trajectory that privileges strategic autonomy, often at the expense of alignment with liberal democratic blocs, as evidenced by trade data showing over 20% of exports directed to China and the EU combined in 2024, with BRICS partners gaining influence in infrastructure projects.[227]Military capabilities and defense expenditures
The South African National Defence Force (SANDF), established in 1994 through the integration of apartheid-era forces and liberation armies, comprises the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Military Health Service, with a mandate encompassing territorial defense, border protection, and regional peacekeeping under the African Union and United Nations frameworks. Active personnel numbered approximately 75,000 in 2024, including around 40,000 in the Army, 7,000 in the Navy, and 10,000 in the Air Force, supplemented by roughly 15,000 reserves whose readiness remains limited due to training shortfalls.[228] Military expenditure reached $2.836 billion in 2024, marking a decline from $2.877 billion in 2023 and the fourth consecutive annual drop, equating to about 0.73 percent of GDP—a level insufficient for modernizing aging equipment or sustaining operational readiness.[229] [230] Personnel costs consume over 50 percent of the budget, leaving scant resources for procurement, maintenance, or capital investments, with a reported shortfall of R41.2 billion (approximately $2.3 billion) constraining deployments and technological upgrades.[231] [232] The Army fields around 200 main battle tanks, primarily aging Olifant variants derived from 1970s Centurion designs, alongside Ratel infantry fighting vehicles suffering from low serviceability rates below 50 percent due to parts shortages and deferred maintenance.[233] The Air Force operates a diminished fleet of 26 Gripen fighters and fewer than 20 serviceable Rooivalk attack helicopters, hampered by grounded aircraft from sustainment failures, while the Navy's three frigates and one submarine face similar obsolescence, with patrol vessel capabilities eroded by underfunding.[234] These limitations have manifested in operational setbacks, such as logistical breakdowns during 2024 deployments to the Democratic Republic of Congo, where troops relied on inadequate equipment and faced supply disruptions.[235] Chronic underfunding, exacerbated by procurement scandals like the 1999 arms deal involving offsets that failed to materialize fully, has eroded capabilities, with analysts noting the SANDF's inability to meet constitutional defense obligations or respond effectively to maritime threats and border incursions.[236] [237] Defence reviews since 2015 have recommended budget increases to 2 percent of GDP for baseline functionality, but fiscal priorities favoring social spending have perpetuated the decline, posing risks to national security amid regional instability.[238][239]Law, Crime, and Security
Judicial system and rule of law indicators
South Africa's judiciary operates as an independent branch of government under the 1996 Constitution, structured hierarchically with the Constitutional Court serving as the apex court for constitutional matters, the Supreme Court of Appeal handling appeals on non-constitutional issues, 17 High Courts for serious civil and criminal cases, and magistrates' courts for lower-level matters.[240] The system emphasizes judicial independence, with judges appointed by the President on recommendation of the Judicial Service Commission, insulated from executive interference through secure tenure and non-removable except for misconduct.[240] However, practical constraints, including resource shortages and political pressures from past state capture scandals, have eroded effectiveness.[241] Rule of law indicators reveal systemic weaknesses. In the World Justice Project Rule of Law Index 2024, South Africa ranked 57th out of 142 countries globally, with an overall score declining by 1.0% from the prior year; regionally, it placed below upper-middle-income peers in Sub-Saharan Africa. The Index's Absence of Corruption factor showed no improvement for South Africa, contrasting with gains in 59% of assessed countries, amid perceptions that judicial bribery and improper influence remain risks despite formal safeguards. The Heritage Foundation's 2025 Index of Economic Freedom rates South Africa's rule of law as weak, with judicial effectiveness below the world average due to inefficient dispute resolution and government influence over outcomes.[242]| Indicator | Score/Ranking | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Overall Rule of Law (2024) | 57th/142 countries | World Justice Project |
| Judicial Constraints on Executive (2023) | 0.858 (scale 0-1) | Varieties of Democracy via Global Economy[243] |
| Property Rights (2025) | Below world average | Heritage Foundation[242] |
Crime rates, organized syndicates, and urban violence
South Africa experiences some of the highest violent crime rates globally, with the murder rate standing at approximately 42 per 100,000 people as of 2024, far exceeding international averages.[250] In the fourth quarter of the 2024/2025 financial year (January to March 2025), the South African Police Service (SAPS) recorded 5,727 murders, a 12.4% decrease from the prior year but averaging 64 murders daily.[251] Contact crimes against persons, including assault and robbery, totaled 161,672 incidents in the same period, underscoring persistent interpersonal violence driven by factors such as socioeconomic disparities and weak deterrence.[252] Aggravated robbery fell by 10.4% to 31,749 cases, yet carjackings and residential burglaries remain rampant, with urban centers like Johannesburg and Cape Town reporting elevated incidences.[251][253] Organized crime syndicates exacerbate these trends through structured operations in extortion, trafficking, and resource exploitation. Groups like the "construction mafia" infiltrate building projects, demanding payoffs via threats and sabotage, contributing to stalled infrastructure development.[254] West African networks, including Black Axe, engage in financial fraud and human trafficking, with INTERPOL operations in 2024 yielding hundreds of arrests and asset seizures linked to such syndicates operating from South Africa.[255] Domestic actors dominate cash-in-transit heists, illegal mining (zama zamas), and drug syndicates, often overlapping with prison-originated gangs like the 26s, 27s, and 28s that enforce codes of violence and control township economies.[256] Sex trafficking rings exploit minors, with syndicates targeting girls as young as 10 in urban brothels, as noted in the U.S. State Department's 2024 Trafficking in Persons Report.[257] These entities thrive amid corruption and porous borders, funding arms and operations that spill into broader criminality.[258] Urban violence manifests acutely in gang-dominated areas, particularly Cape Town's Cape Flats and Johannesburg townships, where over 100 rival gangs vie for drug territories and protection rackets. In Cape Town, gang warfare has led to spikes in shootings, with six fatalities reported in a single two-day period in September 2025 amid turf battles involving firearms smuggled from syndicates.[259] The Numbers gangs and emerging occult-linked groups perpetuate cycles of retaliation, fueled by unemployment and absent policing, resulting in bystanders caught in crossfire and community fear.[260] Johannesburg faces parallel issues with house hijackings and taxi industry enforcers, where minibus syndicates enforce routes through assassinations, contributing to hundreds of annual deaths.[261] Overall, these dynamics reflect state incapacity in maintaining order, with under-resourced SAPS struggling against entrenched networks that prioritize profit over restraint.[262]Farm attacks, rural insecurity, and targeted killings
Farm attacks in South Africa involve violent crimes such as robbery, assault, rape, and murder targeting individuals on farms and smallholdings, often characterized by extreme brutality including torture and mutilation.[263] These incidents contribute to broader rural insecurity, encompassing stock theft, livestock sabotage, and invasions that disrupt agricultural operations and force reliance on private security measures.[264] Official South African Police Service (SAPS) data categorizes such events under general crime statistics, but advocacy groups like AfriForum and the Transvaal Agricultural Union of South Africa (TLU SA) maintain independent tallies, highlighting discrepancies in reporting where SAPS figures may undercount due to definitional differences, such as excluding smallholdings or non-farm owners.[265] [266] Statistics on farm murders reveal persistent violence, with TLU SA recording an average of 63 killings annually over the past decade (635 total from approximately 2014 to 2024), primarily affecting farm owners and dwellers in isolated rural areas.[267] AfriForum's 2023 report documented 49 farm murders alongside 296 attacks, noting that these figures could rise as underreported cases emerge, with incidents often involving groups of perpetrators using firearms and targeting valuables like cash, vehicles, and weapons.[266] In contrast, SAPS and analyses like the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) report 49 farm-related murders for the 2023-2024 period against 27,621 total national murders, representing about 0.2% of murders, though critics argue this absolute metric ignores the per capita risk for the small farming population (estimated at around 40,000 commercial farms) and the premeditated nature of many attacks.[263] [268] Conviction rates remain low at 18% for farm murders from 2016-2021, exceeding the national murder conviction rate of 13% but still indicative of enforcement challenges.[263] Targeted killings within farm attacks often exhibit patterns beyond opportunistic crime, including coordinated assaults on isolated properties, execution-style shootings, and sabotage elements like poisoned water sources or arson, as documented by TLU SA, which classifies recent cases as terrorism aimed at undermining food production.[264] Victims are disproportionately white commercial farmers, who own the majority of productive farmland, though government statements emphasize that attacks affect farm workers across racial lines and deny racial targeting.[268] Rural insecurity exacerbates this through systemic issues like inadequate policing in vast areas, with farm patrols disbanded post-2003 and rural safety strategies yielding limited results; for instance, stock theft losses exceeded R1 billion in 2023, correlating with broader economic sabotage.[263] Farmers have responded by forming self-defense groups, installing advanced surveillance, and emigrating, contributing to a decline in agricultural output in high-risk provinces like Limpopo and KwaZulu-Natal.[266]| Year/Period | Farm Attacks (AfriForum/TLU SA) | Farm Murders (AfriForum/TLU SA) | National Murders (SAPS) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | 296 | 49 | ~27,000 |
| 2014-2024 (avg.) | N/A | 63 | ~20,000-27,000 |
Law enforcement effectiveness and reform needs
The South African Police Service (SAPS) exhibits limited effectiveness in combating crime, as evidenced by persistently low public trust levels reaching a 27-year low in 2024/25, with no province exceeding 30% trust.[269] Personnel shortages exacerbate this, with a national police-to-population ratio of approximately 1:427 officers per citizen as of 2024, far below the United Nations recommendation of 1:220.[270] Despite some gains, such as a 51.4% increase in crimes detected through police action from the fourth quarter of 2020/21 to the fourth quarter of 2024/25, overall detection rates for serious crimes like murder remain low, contributing to high impunity and sustained violent crime prevalence.[252] Corruption within SAPS undermines operational integrity, with surveys indicating that only 32% of South Africans trust the police amid widespread perceptions of graft, including systemic bribery in traffic policing and infiltration by criminal syndicates.[271][272][273] Inadequate training compounds these issues, marked by a nationwide deficit of 358 trainers across colleges, leading to substandard preparation for recruits amid high turnover and resource constraints.[274] Underfunding affects equipment and visible policing, though analysts argue that deeper structural problems, including brutality and politicization, persist beyond budgetary shortfalls.[275] Reform imperatives include professionalizing SAPS through enhanced anti-corruption protocols, such as independent oversight and syndicate infiltration probes, alongside expanding training capacity to address the 5,500 ongoing trainees and reverse morale declines noted in 2023 surveys.[276][277] Increasing personnel to improve population ratios, bolstering detective units via targeted budgets, and fostering community policing forums are essential to rebuild legitimacy, as delays in crime statistics releases further erode accountability.[262] Prioritizing merit-based recruitment over political appointments could mitigate biases observed in post-apartheid transitions, enabling causal links between resourcing and reduced impunity to take hold.[278]Economy
Historical performance and structural shifts
South Africa's economy underwent significant expansion during the 20th century, driven initially by mineral discoveries and subsequent industrialization. Gold and diamond booms in the late 19th century laid the foundation for export-led growth, with real GDP per capita rising steadily from the early 1900s through the mid-1970s, supported by infrastructure investments in railways and ports. Annual GDP growth averaged approximately 3% from 1961 to 1979, fueled by manufacturing expansion and agricultural mechanization under state protectionism.[279] However, the 1980s saw deceleration to an average of 1.6% in the final 14 years of apartheid, exacerbated by international sanctions, internal unrest, and fiscal strains from military spending.[280][281] The transition to majority rule in 1994 marked a policy pivot toward market-oriented reforms, including trade liberalization via GEAR (Growth, Employment and Redistribution) in 1996, which aimed to stabilize macroeconomics and attract foreign investment. This yielded post-apartheid growth averaging over 3% annually from 1994 to 2008, more than doubling the late-apartheid rate, propelled by commodity price surges and integration into global markets; GDP expanded from $136 billion in 1994 to $338 billion by 2008 in current USD terms.[282] Yet, this period masked underlying vulnerabilities, as growth proved commodity-dependent and failed to generate sufficient employment, with unemployment rising from 20% in 1994 to 23% by 2008 amid skills shortages and rigid labor regulations.[279][283] Post-2008 global financial crisis, growth stagnated at an average of 1.2% through 2023, hampered by domestic factors including state-owned enterprise mismanagement, policy uncertainty, and infrastructure decay.[284] Structural shifts intensified deindustrialization, with manufacturing's GDP share declining from 18% in 1994 to 13% by 2022, attributed to high electricity costs, stringent labor laws, and regulatory burdens that elevated production expenses relative to competitors.[285] The services sector, particularly finance and business services, expanded to comprise over 60% of GDP by 2023, reflecting a premature shift away from tradable goods toward non-tradables, which limited export diversification and job creation for low-skilled workers.[286] Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) policies, intended to redress apartheid-era exclusions, inadvertently fostered rent-seeking and elite capture, diverting investment from productive capacity to compliance costs.[287] These dynamics perpetuated high inequality, with the Gini coefficient remaining above 0.60—the world's highest—despite social grants reaching 18 million recipients by 2023, as spatial apartheid legacies confined growth benefits to urban cores.[288] Real GDP per capita has barely grown since 2011, averaging under 1% annually, underscoring a failure to transition to high-productivity manufacturing or agriculture amid land reform delays and water constraints. Empirical analyses indicate that without addressing binding constraints like energy reliability and labor market flexibility, South Africa's growth trajectory risks entrenching middle-income stagnation.[289]Key sectors: mining, agriculture, manufacturing, services
South Africa's mining sector, a historical pillar of the economy, contributed approximately 6% to GDP in 2024 while employing 474,876 workers, down slightly from 479,228 in 2023.[290] The industry leads globally in platinum group metals production and remains significant for gold, coal, and diamonds, but output has stagnated below pre-pandemic levels amid persistent electricity shortages, infrastructure decay, and policy delays in granting mining rights.[291][292] These constraints, exacerbated by load shedding and rail bottlenecks, led to a 0.4% decline in mining's GDP contribution in recent quarters, prompting calls for regulatory reforms to unlock investment.[293] Agriculture accounts for about 2.5% of GDP but punches above its weight in exports, achieving a record $13.7 billion in 2024, a 3.6% increase from 2023, fueled by citrus, berries, wine, and macadamia nuts.[294] The sector demonstrates resilience against droughts, El Niño effects, and input cost inflation, with first-quarter 2025 exports to the US alone rising 19% year-on-year to $118 million.[295] However, production faces headwinds from unreliable power supply, logistical failures at ports and rail, and expropriation-without-compensation policies that deter investment, resulting in subdued growth projections for winter crops at 2.65 million tons in 2024/25, down 2.6% year-on-year.[296][297] Manufacturing, which constitutes roughly 13% of GDP, experienced a 0.6% contraction in the fourth quarter of 2024, dragging overall economic growth, with year-on-year production down 2.6% in November 2024.[298][299] Subsectors like basic iron and chemicals have been hit hardest by soaring energy tariffs, supply chain disruptions, and competition from low-cost imports, leading to a 2.53% revenue drop across surveyed firms from 2023 to 2024.[300] Despite pockets of export-oriented activity in autos and machinery, the sector's value added as a GDP share has trended downward since the 1990s, reflecting deindustrialization driven by uncompetitive labor regulations and infrastructure deficits rather than inherent comparative disadvantage.[293] The services sector dominates with over 60% of GDP, anchored by a sophisticated financial industry in Johannesburg—Africa's largest bourse—and burgeoning telecommunications, though tourism recovery highlights vulnerabilities.[301] Tourism generated ZAR 618.7 billion in economic impact in 2024 (9.4% below 2019 peaks) and employed 1.46 million, with arrivals hitting 8.92 million, up 5.1% from 2023, driven by African and European markets.[302][303] Finance and business services provide stability, but the sector overall grapples with skills shortages, regulatory burdens, and crime-related disincentives for foreign direct investment, limiting its potential to offset industrial weaknesses.[304]Labor policies, BEE, unemployment, and skills mismatches
South Africa's labor policies, shaped by post-apartheid reforms, emphasize worker protections through the Labour Relations Act of 1995 and the Basic Conditions of Employment Act, which mandate collective bargaining, restrict dismissals, and impose procedural hurdles for hiring and firing. These rigidities, including sector-wide bargaining councils that extend union agreements to non-parties, elevate wage floors above market-clearing levels in low-skill sectors, deterring formal employment creation particularly for entry-level workers.[305] The national minimum wage, set at 27.58 rand per hour in 2023 and adjusted annually, has been linked to modest job losses in vulnerable sectors like agriculture and domestic work, as firms respond to higher costs by reducing headcounts or automating.[306] Black Economic Empowerment (BEE), formalized under the Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act of 2003 and amended in 2013, requires companies to meet scorecard targets for black ownership (at least 25%), management control, skills development, and preferential procurement to access government contracts and licenses.[307] While intended to redress apartheid-era exclusions by promoting black participation in the economy, BEE has primarily enriched a politically connected elite through ownership deals rather than broad-based upliftment, with compliance costs burdening small firms and foreign investors, who cite it as a barrier to expansion.[308] Empirical analyses indicate BEE correlates with reduced economic growth and job opportunities, as heightened regulatory burdens and ownership mandates discourage investment; for instance, from 2014 to 2024, the black unemployment rate rose by 9 percentage points while white unemployment fell by 1 point, suggesting limited trickle-down effects.[309] Unemployment remains structurally entrenched, reaching 33.2% in the second quarter of 2025 per official Statistics South Africa data, with over 8 million people jobless amid a labor force expansion.[310] Youth unemployment (ages 15-24) stood at 62.2% in the same period, exacerbated by barriers to first-time entry into formal markets, where rigid dismissal protections amplify employer risk aversion toward inexperienced hires.[5] Causal factors include subdued GDP growth averaging under 1% annually since 2010, union-driven wage premiums exceeding productivity gains, and policy-induced capital flight, which collectively suppress labor demand; expanded measures including discouraged workers push the rate above 40%.[311] Skills mismatches amplify these challenges, as the education system's output—marked by low matric pass rates in mathematics and science (around 30% for higher-grade math in 2024)—fails to align with employer needs for technical and vocational competencies in sectors like manufacturing and IT.[312] Over 60% of firms identify skills gaps as a primary obstacle to business transformation by 2030, with graduates often overqualified in humanities but underprepared for practical roles, leading to persistent youth NEET (not in employment, education, or training) rates exceeding 40%.[313] This disconnect stems from underinvestment in technical training and a curriculum prioritizing equity over quality, resulting in a surplus of low-skill labor against shortages in engineering and digital fields, further entrenching unemployment cycles.[314]Inequality metrics, poverty traps, and wealth disparities
South Africa possesses one of the highest levels of income inequality worldwide, registering a Gini coefficient of 0.63 based on the most recent comprehensive measurements.[315] This metric, which ranges from 0 for perfect equality to 1 for complete inequality, reflects a distribution where the top income decile captures over 50% of total national income, while the bottom half receives less than 10%.[316] Wealth inequality exceeds income disparities, with the uppermost 10% of households commanding 80-90% of net wealth from 1993 to 2017, a share that has shown minimal decline post-apartheid.[317] The top 1% alone holds 55% of wealth, surpassing levels in comparably unequal nations like the United States or Russia.[318] Poverty affects over 55% of the population under the upper-bound national poverty line of R1,634 per person per month as of 2024, equating to expenditures below R13,656 monthly for a typical household.[319][320] This threshold captures multidimensional deprivation, including food insecurity and inadequate access to services, with rural areas and black South Africans experiencing rates up to 58.1%.[321] Racial wealth gaps remain stark, as the median black household possesses assets equivalent to just 5% of the median white household's, perpetuating intergenerational transfers of advantage through property and education.[322] Policies such as broad-based black economic empowerment have expanded black representation in the top income decile since 2014, yet overall concentration has not abated, with elite capture diverting benefits from broader upliftment.[323] Poverty traps manifest through interlocking barriers, including chronic unemployment exceeding 30%, which erodes skills and confines households to low-wage informal sectors or grant dependency.[324] Spatial legacies of apartheid concentrate the poor in townships distant from economic hubs, inflating transport costs and limiting job access, while deficient education—marked by low matric pass rates in STEM fields—restricts upward mobility.[325] Health shocks, such as HIV prevalence, and social exclusion further entrench cycles, as evidenced by qualitative studies showing mutual reinforcement between low social capital and persistent deprivation.[326] Social grants, reaching 18 million recipients by 2023, avert absolute destitution but risk disincentivizing labor participation, sustaining a status quo where transitory shocks evolve into chronic states absent structural reforms in human capital and infrastructure.[327]Fiscal management, debt burdens, and recent greylist exit
South Africa's fiscal management has been characterized by persistent budget deficits and structural challenges, exacerbated by low economic growth, high public spending on social grants and state-owned enterprises, and inefficiencies from corruption scandals such as state capture during Jacob Zuma's presidency from 2009 to 2018. The consolidated budget deficit stood at 5% of GDP in 2024, reflecting ongoing pressures from elevated debt-servicing costs that consumed about 20% of revenue and limited space for productive investments.[328] Efforts to stabilize finances intensified after the 2024 formation of a Government of National Unity following the ANC's loss of an outright electoral majority, with Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana emphasizing expenditure restraint and revenue enhancement measures in the 2025 budget, though projections indicate deficits widening to 4.3% of GDP in the fiscal year ending March 2026 due to subdued growth and rising unemployment.[329][330] Public debt burdens have escalated significantly, reaching 76.9% of GDP in 2024 and projected to climb to 78.4% by fiscal year 2026, driven by cumulative deficits averaging 5.6% of GDP post-pandemic amid high global interest rates and domestic fiscal rigidities.[331][330] Debt sustainability concerns persist, as interest payments now crowd out capital spending and social services, with the debt-to-GDP ratio rising from 26% in 2008/09 to over 73% by 2023/24, signaling potential risks of a fiscal trap without sustained reforms in revenue mobilization and spending efficiency.[332] Independent analyses, including from the IMF, highlight that while primary surpluses may emerge in 2025/26, vulnerabilities from weak GDP growth—averaging below 1% annually since 2010—and contingent liabilities from state firms like Eskom undermine long-term stability.[333][334] In parallel, South Africa addressed deficiencies in anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing regimes, leading to its removal from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) greylist on October 24, 2025, after being placed there in February 2023 for failing to effectively prosecute illicit financial flows and supervise high-risk sectors.[335][336] The exit followed completion of all 22 action items, including enhanced asset recovery from corruption cases and improved risk-based supervision, bolstered by legislative reforms like the 2022 General Laws Amendment Act and inter-agency task forces, though critics note that greylisting stemmed from systemic weaknesses exposed by scandals like those involving the Gupta family.[337] This delisting is expected to reduce compliance costs for financial institutions—estimated at billions of rands since 2023—and improve access to international capital, potentially easing debt pressures, but sustained implementation is required to prevent recidivism given historical enforcement lapses.[338]Infrastructure and Resources
Energy production, load shedding, and reform attempts
South Africa's electricity sector is dominated by the state-owned utility Eskom, which generates approximately 95% of the country's power, primarily from coal-fired plants accounting for over 80% of total generation as of 2024.[339] Installed capacity stands at around 58 gigawatts (GW), but chronic underperformance has limited effective output, with coal plants comprising the bulk despite aging infrastructure built largely in the 1970s and 1980s.[340] Nuclear power from the Koeberg plant contributes about 3.5% , while renewables—solar leading at over 6 GW installed by 2023 and wind under 5%—have grown modestly but remain marginal in the energy mix due to grid integration challenges and policy delays.[339][341] Load shedding, or deliberate power rationing to prevent total grid collapse, originated in 2007 amid unmet demand forecasts and delayed capacity additions, but intensified from 2014 due to Eskom's operational failures.[342] Primary causes include decades of deferred maintenance on coal units, leading to breakdowns averaging 14,000-15,000 MW of unplanned outages weekly in 2025, compounded by internal corruption exemplified by state capture under former president Jacob Zuma, where billions in procurement were siphoned through inflated contracts and kickbacks.[343][344] Sabotage, such as cable theft and vandalism at plants, further eroded reliability, while mismanagement—rising employee costs, skills shortages, and resistance to private sector involvement—exacerbated the crisis.[345][346] Timeline highlights include Stage 6 blackouts (up to 6,000 MW cuts) peaking in 2023 with over 300 days of outages, a suspension from March to November 2024 amid better maintenance, and a return to severe stages in early 2025, costing the economy an estimated 5-10% of GDP annually through lost productivity and industrial shutdowns.[347][348][349] Reform efforts gained momentum under President Cyril Ramaphosa from 2018, focusing on unbundling Eskom into separate generation, transmission (via the National Transmission Company of South Africa, operationalized in 2024), and distribution entities to foster competition and efficiency.[350] The Renewable Energy Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme (REIPPPP) has procured over 6 GW of solar and wind since 2011, though grid constraints limited integration to about 11 GW pending upgrades.[351] The Electricity Regulation Amendment Act of 2024 removed Eskom's exclusive purchasing mandate, enabling direct private wheeling and bilateral trades, while the Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) 2025 outlines adding 20-30 GW by 2030, emphasizing renewables (14 GW wind, 6 GW solar) alongside gas and potential nuclear extensions.[352][353] Despite these steps, implementation lags due to union opposition to privatization, Eskom's debt exceeding R400 billion ($22 billion), and regulatory hurdles, resulting in only partial relief from load shedding as of mid-2025.[354][355] Independent analyses attribute persistent shortfalls to insufficient political will for full market liberalization, perpetuating Eskom's monopoly inefficiencies over technical or resource constraints.[356]Transportation networks and logistics bottlenecks
South Africa's transportation infrastructure encompasses a vast road network exceeding 750,000 kilometers, including approximately 20,000 kilometers of national highways that link major urban and industrial hubs such as Johannesburg, Cape Town, and Durban.[357] The rail system, managed primarily by the state-owned Transnet Freight Rail, spans over 20,000 kilometers and is optimized for bulk commodity transport, including minerals and agricultural goods, forming the backbone of freight movement historically.[358] Maritime ports, operated under Transnet Port Terminals, handle the majority of the country's exports and imports, with Durban accounting for about 60% of container throughput and Richards Bay serving as a key coal export facility.[359] Airports, including O.R. Tambo International in Johannesburg, support both domestic connectivity and international cargo, with the sector facilitating over 20 million passengers annually pre-pandemic levels.[360] Significant logistics bottlenecks persist, particularly in rail and port operations, undermining export competitiveness. Transnet's rail freight volumes are projected to reach only 160-165 million tons for the fiscal year ending March 2025, falling short of recovery targets due to persistent infrastructure degradation, locomotive shortages, and high incidences of derailments (278 reported) and collisions (687) in recent assessments.[361] [362] Cable theft, vandalism, and sabotage have exacerbated network unreliability, prompting a modal shift to road transport that overloads highways and elevates logistics costs by up to 30-40% for exporters.[363] [364] Port congestion remains acute, with Durban experiencing chronic delays that extended vessel wait times to over 10 days in peak periods through 2024, driven by equipment breakdowns, labor disputes, and underinvestment in terminal capacity.[365] Productivity has stagnated despite volume increases, with full recovery not anticipated until mid-2025, resulting in billions of rand in annual export revenue losses and diverted shipments to competing African ports like Maputo.[366] [367] These issues stem from Transnet's operational inefficiencies and maintenance backlogs, compounded by its monopoly status, which has deterred private investment until recent reforms allowing third-party access to rail lines.[368] [369] In the World Bank's Logistics Performance Index for 2023, South Africa ranked 29th globally with an overall score of 3.38 out of 5, reflecting middling performance in infrastructure (3.6) and timeliness (3.8), but highlighting deficiencies in customs efficiency and logistics competence relative to upper-middle-income peers.[370] Efforts to alleviate bottlenecks include a planned $7.3 billion investment by Transnet over five years in rail and port upgrades, alongside regulatory shifts toward private sector participation, though implementation delays tied to governance challenges continue to impede progress.[371]Water scarcity, sanitation failures, and urban decay
South Africa faces chronic water scarcity, exacerbated by its semi-arid climate receiving only half the global average rainfall and uneven distribution across regions.[372][115] The country is projected to reach physical water scarcity by 2025, with a 17% water deficit expected by 2030 due to population growth, climate variability, and insufficient infrastructure investment.[373] In major cities like Johannesburg, severe shortages have intensified since 2023, driven by prolonged droughts, aging pipelines losing up to 40% of treated water through leaks and theft, and inadequate maintenance.[374][375] Cape Town's near "Day Zero" experience in 2018 highlighted vulnerabilities, with reservoirs dropping below 20% capacity, though temporary conservation measures averted total cutoff; similar risks persist amid erratic rainfall patterns influenced by climate change.[376] Sanitation infrastructure has deteriorated markedly, with nearly half of the country's 1,370 wastewater treatment works failing to meet basic standards as of audits through 2022, a situation persisting into 2025 due to underfunding and neglect.[377] Daily losses exceed millions of litres of untreated sewage spilling into rivers like the Vaal and Umgeni, contaminating ecosystems and prompting beach closures in Durban from pollution levels exceeding safe limits by factors of 10 or more.[378][379] In Johannesburg and surrounding Gauteng areas, collapsed pumps and unmaintained plants have led to chronic overflows, fueling cholera outbreaks such as the 2023 Hammanskraal incident that killed over 30 people from contaminated water.[380] These failures stem primarily from municipal mismanagement, with corruption siphoning funds—evidenced by inflated tenders and ghost workers—leaving systems under capacity despite available budgets.[381][382] Criminal syndicates, dubbed "water mafias," further exploit breakdowns by tampering with infrastructure to monopolize tanker deliveries, as seen in North West province incidents in 2025 where pumps were sabotaged for profit.[383][384] Urban decay in South African cities, particularly Johannesburg's inner core, Durban's Point Road district, and parts of Cape Town's older suburbs, manifests as abandoned buildings, unchecked waste accumulation, and proliferating informal settlements amid service breakdowns.[385][386] Johannesburg's central business district exemplifies this, with over 200 "problem buildings" hijacked or derelict by 2023, contributing to visible blight, heightened crime rates exceeding 100 incidents per 1,000 residents annually, and service delivery protests that damaged infrastructure further.[387] Water and sanitation collapses accelerate decay: persistent leaks erode roads, sewage floods streets, and unreliable supply drives middle-class exodus, leaving behind low-income populations in under-serviced zones.[388] Rapid urbanization—adding over 1 million residents to metros since 2011 without proportional capacity—compounds issues, as municipalities grapple with debt exceeding R200 billion by 2025, much tied to unpaid services and corrupt procurement in utilities.[389][375] Government interventions, such as the 2025 Water Indaba resolutions for audits and private partnerships, have yielded limited results, with ongoing regressions in treatment plant compliance underscoring entrenched governance failures over climatic factors alone.[390][391]Telecommunications expansion and digital divides
South Africa's telecommunications sector has experienced steady growth, with revenues increasing to R232 billion in 2024 from R208 billion in 2023, driven primarily by mobile services and a compound annual growth rate of 3.69% from 2020 to 2024.[392][393] Mobile cellular subscriptions reached 179 per 100 inhabitants in 2024, totaling approximately 109.77 million connections, underscoring widespread mobile adoption amid limited fixed-line infrastructure.[394][395] Internet penetration stood at 74.7% of the population, with 45.3 million users as of January 2024, facilitated by expanding mobile broadband and data services.[396][397] Advancements in infrastructure include ongoing 5G deployments, with operators like MTN completing core network modernizations in September 2025 to support expanded coverage, and projections for over 1,200 5G base stations nationwide.[398][399] Fiber optic expansion has accelerated, exemplified by a R160 million investment in manufacturing capacity in KwaZulu-Natal in March 2025 and partnerships such as Nokia's with Fibertime to connect an additional 400,000 homes in underserved areas by October 2025.[400][401] These initiatives aim to boost fixed broadband, which remains underdeveloped compared to mobile, with regulatory efforts by the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA) focusing on spectrum allocation and wholesale rate reductions implemented in March 2024.[402] Persistent digital divides, however, undermine equitable access, particularly along urban-rural lines, where rural smartphone users encountered 14.4% slower download speeds and 29.2% slower upload speeds than urban counterparts in 2023.[403] In rural provinces like Limpopo, reliable household internet access hovers around 1.7%, exacerbated by sparse infrastructure, high data costs relative to incomes, and limited digital literacy.[404] While over 75% of households report some internet access and 97% own at least one mobile device, a usage gap prevails, with many in coverage areas—estimated at 64% continent-wide—not actively using mobile internet due to affordability barriers and skill deficiencies.[405][406] These disparities perpetuate socio-economic inequalities, as rural and low-income populations, often overlapping with historical inequities, face restricted opportunities in education, employment, and e-commerce.[407] ICASA's policies seek to address this through universal service obligations, though implementation lags amid regulatory challenges, including a October 2025 court ruling invalidating certain broadband market power assessments against major operators.[408]Social Issues and Controversies
Persistent inequality, affirmative action debates, and outcomes
South Africa's income inequality remains the highest globally, with a Gini coefficient estimated at 0.63 to 0.67 as of recent analyses.[409][410] This metric reflects stark disparities, exacerbated by racial lines: in the 2022/2023 Income and Expenditure Survey, average annual household income for white-headed households reached approximately R676,000, nearly five times that of black African-headed households at around R140,000.[411][412] Wealth gaps are even more pronounced, with the median black household holding just 5% of the wealth owned by the median white household, a ratio persisting despite post-apartheid reforms.[413] In response to apartheid legacies, policies like Black Economic Empowerment (BEE), enacted through the Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act of 2003, aimed to promote black ownership, management, and skills development in the economy. Complementary affirmative action measures, including the Employment Equity Act of 1998, set demographic targets for workforce representation, prioritizing previously disadvantaged groups—primarily black Africans, Coloureds, and Indians—over strict merit criteria.[414] Proponents argue these redress historical exclusions and foster inclusive growth, citing modest increases in black middle-class formation and corporate board diversity.[415] Critics contend that such policies distort markets, prioritize race over competence, and enable elite capture rather than broad upliftment. Independent analyses highlight BEE's role in fostering cronyism, where politically connected individuals secure deals, often through fronting schemes that evade ownership requirements, benefiting a narrow cadre—estimated at fewer than 100 major beneficiaries—while over 80% of black South Africans report no gains.[416][417] Corruption scandals, including state capture inquiries, link BEE compliance to inflated contracts and graft, undermining investment and productivity.[418] Polls indicate pluralities of South Africans, including black respondents, view BEE as outdated and growth-hindering, with calls from parties like the Democratic Alliance to abolish it for exacerbating unemployment (officially 33% in 2023) via skills mismatches and capital flight.[419][420] Outcomes reveal limited progress in closing gaps: despite three decades of these interventions, racial income disparities have narrowed only marginally, with black household spending growth offset by persistent poverty traps affecting 55% of the population.[421] Studies on listed firms show BEE transactions correlating with reduced labor productivity and profitability, suggesting causal inefficiencies from non-merit allocations.[422] Broader empirical evidence points to policy failures in addressing root causes like education deficits—where black matric pass rates lag—and regulatory burdens, perpetuating a cycle where inequality endures amid elite enrichment rather than systemic merit-based empowerment.[423][413]Land reform policies, expropriation risks, and property rights
South Africa's land reform policies emerged post-1994 to address historical dispossessions under laws like the 1913 Natives Land Act, which restricted black ownership to 7% of land (expanded to 13% by 1936).[424] The framework includes restitution for verified claims of post-1913 dispossession, redistribution via market mechanisms like "willing buyer, willing seller," and tenure security enhancements.[425] By 2025, restitution has settled over 80,000 claims covering 3.5 million hectares, but redistribution has lagged, achieving only about 8-10% of targeted farmland transfer since 1994, hampered by bureaucratic delays, funding shortfalls, and post-transfer mismanagement leading to productivity declines on many redistributed farms.[426] [427] The African National Congress (ANC) intensified reform debates with a 2017 party resolution endorsing expropriation without compensation (EWC), prompting a failed 2021 constitutional amendment attempt that lacked required parliamentary support.[428] On January 23, 2025, President Cyril Ramaphosa signed the Expropriation Bill into law (Act 13 of 2024), repealing the 1975 apartheid-era act and formalizing procedures for state acquisition of property for public purposes.[429] The act permits nil compensation only in limited, "just and equitable" scenarios—such as unused land held for speculation, state-held properties, or abandoned assets—while requiring negotiation and market-value payouts in most cases, distinguishing it from broader seizures seen in Zimbabwe.[430] [431] Despite these constraints, the legislation has heightened expropriation risks, introducing uncertainty into property rights that underpin commercial agriculture, which contributes 2-3% to GDP and supports food security.[432] Agricultural organizations like AgriSA argue it threatens the private ownership foundation of farming, potentially deterring investment and echoing empirical patterns where weakened tenure security correlates with capital flight and output drops in developing economies.[433] Critics, including the Institute of Race Relations, highlight opaque criteria for nil compensation and delayed payments as hidden vulnerabilities, exacerbating farm vulnerabilities amid ongoing security challenges like rural crime.[434] As of mid-2025, no major EWC implementations have occurred, but the policy shift has fueled perceptions of arbitrary state power, with white farmers—who hold approximately 70% of individually owned farmland per 2017 audits and recent estimates—expressing heightened emigration incentives.[435] [436] Property rights erosion risks extend beyond land to broader economic stability, as secure tenure incentivizes long-term improvements; South Africa's post-reform farm failures often stem from inadequate skills transfer and elite capture rather than ownership alone, yet EWC rhetoric amplifies distrust in state impartiality.[426] Government sources emphasize public interest safeguards, but farmer groups and international observers like the Heritage Foundation warn of precedent for overreach, potentially mirroring outcomes in nations where policy uncertainty stifled agricultural productivity.[437] Ongoing debates reflect tensions between redress imperatives and causal evidence that market-assisted reforms with support services yield better equity and output than coercive measures.[438]HIV/AIDS legacy, public health responses, and demographic impacts
South Africa's HIV/AIDS epidemic emerged prominently in the mid-1990s, with prevalence rates among adults aged 15-49 reaching approximately 20% by 2000, driven by factors including high rates of multiple sexual partnerships, low condom use, and vertical transmission from mother to child.[439] The crisis intensified under President Thabo Mbeki's administration (1999-2008), which embraced AIDS denialism, questioning the causal link between HIV and AIDS and prioritizing nutritional and poverty-based interventions over antiretroviral therapy (ART).[440] This stance delayed national ART rollout and obstructed access to proven treatments, resulting in an estimated 330,000 preventable deaths between 2000 and 2005, alongside over 35,000 preventable mother-to-child transmissions.[441] Public health responses shifted decisively under President Jacob Zuma starting in 2009, when the government committed to expanding ART access, establishing a national program that has grown to treat over 5.7 million people by 2023, representing the world's largest such initiative.[442] [443] Eligibility criteria expanded progressively, incorporating WHO guidelines for earlier treatment initiation, with test-and-treat policies fully implemented by 2016; by 2023, South Africa achieved 92% awareness of HIV status among those infected, 95% of whom were on ART, and 91% virally suppressed among treated individuals.[444] Despite these advances, challenges persist, including stockouts of ART drugs and uneven rural access, though new interventions like the twice-yearly lenacapavir injection—rolled out in 2025 and nearly 100% effective in prevention—signal ongoing innovation.[445] Demographically, the epidemic halved life expectancy at birth from around 62 years in 1992 to 53 years by 2005, primarily due to peak adult mortality rates exceeding 1% annually in the early 2000s.[446] Post-ART rollout, life expectancy rebounded by 11.1 years between 2006 and 2017, with 8.9 years attributable to reduced HIV mortality, particularly among those under 49.[447] The orphan crisis peaked with over 1.2 million children losing mothers to AIDS by 2010, straining extended family structures and contributing to intergenerational poverty; workforce depletion similarly reduced labor productivity, though ART has since stabilized population growth projections, averting a 44% shortfall otherwise expected by 2025.[448] [449]| Year | Adult HIV Prevalence (15-49, %) | New Infections (annual estimate) | People on ART (millions) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | ~20 | N/A | <0.1 |
| 2010 | 19.0 | ~400,000 | ~1.8 |
| 2023 | 17.1 | 160,000-178,000 | 5.7 |
